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How do YOU make YOUR starter, and how long before brewing do YOU start?

Discussion in 'Beginners Beer Brewing Forum' started by peripatetic, Oct 31, 2009.

 

  1. #1
    peripatetic

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 31, 2009
    Hey there,

    There are a ton of threads about yeast where the answer is "make a starter! here's how I do it: . . ."

    I am probably going to take the plunge into using starters, particularly because I want to start moving up in the whole OG department. Belgian Specialty Ales here I come!

    But first, I wanted to take a quick survey:

    1) do you make a starter? (Never, Depends, Always, RBMSI (Real Brewers Make Starters, Idiot))

    2) with what? (water, wort, water then wort, etc.)

    3) when do you start your starter? (during brewing, 1 hr before, 1 day before, IAAPYF (I Am A Professional Yeast Farmer))
     
  2. #2
    Yooper

    Ale's What Cures You! Staff Member  

    Posted Oct 31, 2009
    1. Always, when using liquid yeast. I generally follow mrmalty.com's yeast pitching calculator.

    2. Wort, of course. Water is just, well, water. I try to go to about 1.040 for all starters. To make life easier, I use 1/2 cup DME to 2 cups boiling water and scale up as needed depending on how big my starter is.

    3. Depends. I like to either pitch within 24 hours, or let it ferment out completely and then put it in the fridge. If it's been in the fridge a few days, I decant the spent wort, swirl up the remains and pitch. That's my preference, actually, especially with lagers.
     
  3. #3
    philrose

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 31, 2009
    1. Always...with exception for dry yeast, repitching or very low og session brews

    2. I use amber DME with a pint of water, 1.030-1.040. I use a growler and pure o2 for about 30 seconds, then pitch that starter into a carboy with more wort if necessary. I usually don't decant the young beer if its a small starter in a growler but if its in the carboy I'll use SWMBO's creme brulee torch on the neck, cool, decant, wipe down with star san.

    The only reason why I use the amber stuff is because I bought way too much of it when I was a new brewer. Never seen any problems with color yet.

    3. The night before the night before brewday (not stuttering) is my general time to make a starter
     
  4. #4
    boo boo

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 31, 2009
    I make a starter with liquid yeast every time.
    I use left over wort from a previous brewday that was frozen or canned. If frozen I boil it and cool it before using, if canned, it is good to go right out of the bottle.
    I make my starters a week in advance and decant, although it didn't do me any good on my last brew. I made the starter as usual out of saved wort, but the pack I used was 2 years old and one week wasn't enough to propagate enough yeast to pitch to a lager.
    So I ended up using a pack of W34/70 yeast.
     
  5. #5
    iparks81

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 31, 2009
    I boil 2 cups water and add one cup extra light DME
    boil for about 10-15 min. Cool it down to pitching temps and funnel it into my growler. pitch the yeast and shake the hell out of it. Put an airlock up on top and let it go to work....I normally make a starter the Day before I Brew
     
  6. #6
    Crazytwoknobs

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 31, 2009
    So, in volume measurements (easier for DME):

    .25-.5 : 1 (Malt : water)

    Boil, cool, pitch, wait for krausen, pitch.
     
  7. #7
    DeathBrewer

    Maniacally Malty  

    Posted Oct 31, 2009
    1) Usually. I don't use a starter for small beers or when I'm doing a quick, unexpected brew after werk. For most low-gravity beers, it isn't necessary as long as you have a semi-fresh vial. It's always beneficial, however.

    2) I usually just do the 1/2 cup extract (wheat, light or pilsner depending on brew...usually dry) in 2 cups of water. I heat the water, add extract as it is coming to heat, stir well and boil lightly for 10-15 minutes in a saucepan.

    I then cool in an ice bath (just a large bowl with ice water) until cool to the touch. Be sure to wipe off water from the saucepan, then pour into a sanitized 1000mL flask, top off with bottled water to about 700mL and add the yeast. Cover with sanitized aluminum foil and shake as often as possible until brew time or use stir plate.

    If you want an exact gravity (~1.040 is the general consensus), it's best to go by weight.

    I never use an airlock...defeats the purpose as the yeast grows better with oxygen.

    3) I generally do 1-2 days before, but will start it the morning of a brewday if I feel the need. That is where a stirplate comes in handy, as it will take care of that extract within 12 hours, no problem.

    I don't ever leave the yeast in the fridge overnight to decant the liquid. That works fine for growing up yeast to store or use in multiple batches, but an actively fermenting yeast is the best for direct pitching. You'll get a quick, clean fermentation from active yeast...no sense in making them wake up just to lose that little bit of liquid that won't affect your beer.

    X) Or I just use dry yeast :D
     
  8. #8
    twst1up

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 31, 2009
    %90 of the time i prepare a starter, 1/2 cup dme per pint
    Boiled in a flask which makes it wayyyyyy easier to cool.
    The last question is harder to answer as i tend to be a lazy brewer...i may have a starter sitting for days if not weeks, if i feel the need i step it up: decant and add another pint boiled and cooled. The foam airlocks work great, although seems alot just use foil...i'm much too paranoid to use foil.
    Stirplate also seems to help alot
    never really understood mr. malty: are they talking about the amount of slurry or total amount of sterile wort used (decanted before stepping up?) i figure i at least have alot more yeast than i started with
     
  9. #9
    JLem

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 31, 2009
    1) Depends - if it needs it or not (see Mr. Malty)

    2) Wort, of course - otherwise it's not a starter. How much? Well, you need a bigger starter for bigger beers (ABV and/or overall volume) - one size does not fit all. Again, see Mr. Malty.

    3) Usually 2 days before I brew
     
  10. #10
    android

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 31, 2009
    exactly what yooper said, except i like to use the 100g of DME per 1L of water (i.e. 1.7L of water would get 170g DME), gotta love the metric system.
     
    myntz likes this.
  11. #11
    likes2brew

    Member

    Posted Nov 1, 2009
    90% of the time
    4oz of DME and 4cups boiling water Boil for 10 minutes
    Cool in ice bath pitch to a glass jar shake shake shake
    Keep lid on loosely
    2-days before
     
  12. #12
    CGengo

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Nov 1, 2009
    1. Sometimes. I often use S-04 and never make a starter when using dry yeast. If I'm using liquid I usually make a starter depending on the OG.

    2. I use Jamil's advice from Brewing Classic Styles - i.e. 10:1 ratio, 10ml water to 1 gram DME so 200g DME in a 2L starter.

    3. I make mine the afternoon or evening before brewday - usually gives me 16 - 20 hours before pitching.
     
  13. #13
    peripatetic

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Nov 1, 2009
    THANKS for all of the info! This is some great stuff.

    In retrospect, I should have noted that I have only used dry yeast so far. It sounds like most of you use liquid yeast. I guess the first question should have been:

    0) What kind of yeast do you use? (always dry, always liquid, depends on the beer)

    0.1) If dry, do you a) rehydrate, b) make starter, or c) neither, just pitch it from the packet?
     
  14. #14
    JLem

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Nov 1, 2009
    0) mostly liquid (or repitched slurry from a beer that used a liquid yeast), dry yeast on occasion

    0.1) rehydrate, no starter with dry yeast

    Also, for liquid yeast starters I use 1oz DME per cup of H2O.
     
  15. #15
    philrose

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Nov 1, 2009
    0) Half dry, Half liquid- I make about 50% American Beer and 50% Belgian beer, for the vast majority of the american brews, I'll use s-05

    0.1) Always rehydrate in preboiled water, I use BrewPal software to tell me if I need more than a standard sachet of yeast. If its close to 11g, I just go with one sachet.
     
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