Good idea. I have seen it also used for cleaning beer bottles for home brewing and if your son says they clean the kitchen with ot you cant go wrong.If you're really concern about reusing the jars, just wash them and then dip them in a Star San solution.
I brew my own mead and reuse the gallon glass jars all the time. I dip every thing I use in a Star San solution of 1 oz. to five gallon of water. I then let everything air dry.
If you're concerned about the warning label, it's there because the stuff is acid based and could make you sick if you drink it straight. My son is an executive chef and he said every good kitchen he's worked in used Star San to clean and sanitize everything. He even uses it at home.
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Now that I think about it, I may pick up a cheap flea market pipe and dip the bowl and the stem in Star San to see if it can de-ghost the pipe.
For decades. I find them handy in a desk drawer, lying on their sides. Lid is quick to unscrew, wide mouth for dumping excess back into jar, they're free, etc. Obnoxious scent from last experiment with an aromatic? Just toss it.Smucker's natural peanut butter jars...
Better question yet, if they use different machinery for different blend types? Or are they infusing those nasty aromatic flavors into our beloved English blends right at the factory?Do the tobacco factories reuse presses and such?
Yeah, that's the biggest problem with pipe smoking.....emptying too many jars.....y'all empty your jars?
Yeah, that's the biggest problem with pipe smoking.....emptying too many jars
It gets costly to keep having to refill them.
Yes, empty them before refilling them with a different tobacco, unless you don't mind cross blending. A little bit of some tobacco will really change others added to it.
My dishwasher has a sterilization setting. The steam that it generates is the home equivalent of an autoclave. Those things are coming out of my dishwasher cleaner and safer than any hand wash could do. There is zero reason for concern about mold with this process, which is as easy as pushing a button. Reuse, recycle. Easy peasy.
Like $500 pipes, the jars are meant to be used more than once. I might consider new jars for serious long term storage, but I'm not in that world at the moment. I just want to keep the tobacco I'm smoking from drying out maybe for a period of a year or so. I also have found nothing stating that new jars are sterilized, let alone even clean from the factory. Maybe some manufacturers do but nothing I've read says so.With all the careless spending I see on this site, 500 dollar pipes and such, you guys are too cheap for fresh jars?
Mason jars are not an expensive thing.
If The Clay King followed you around, he'd be rich.Reduce, reuse, recycle... My balls.