sirsloop
Well-Known Member
Ha............
Is this a good way to make a starter for high grav brew? Yeast Energizer is the stuff for 'waking up' yeast that didn't finish (I dunno what it does wrt yeast health and future fermenting power) and it seems corn sugar might make the yeast lazy wrt fermentables (only fermenting the simplest/easiest to ferment). It seems for high grav you need a lot of yeast but it seems it should be healthy as possible and not 'lazy' (for lack of a better word). I don't do high grav brews yet so I'm sincerely asking.I harvested the yeast from the stout's primary, and prepared a healthy starter with yeast energizer and corn sugar.
...From these equations it is evident that sucrose produces a specific gravity increase of 46.31 points/lb/gal
Because it is the reference, only sucrose will yield 100% of its weight as extract when dissolved in water. Other sugars, even though they will completely dissolve, produce a smaller increase in density and yield something less than 100%. Dry malt extract, for example, yields about 97%, dextrose (corn sugar) about 90%.
I'm not a fan of non-fermentable sweetners. You're talking about something like splenda? There's no need to add it considering the yeast won't be able to ferment it. We're only talkin about like a pound of additional sugar at this point.
Mine finished at 1.030 and is plenty sweet in my opinion. From what I have heard DFH 120 min IPA is in the 1.040s, but I have never tested myself.
Do you know what? I'm almost starting to feel sorry for the yeast. All that reproducing and gorging themselves sure sounds like fun, but they must be exhausted by now. In fact, if your yeast were human, you know what they'd look like?
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