Yeah, I'd ferment a gallon (or 3/4 gallon in a gallon jug) with it. Like making a big starter.It’s just a random one off that I didn’t realize I had until some reorganization.
yeah still sealed - looks new. Stored cool but not refrigerated. But who knows what happened to it before I acquired it.
Yeah, I'd ferment a gallon (or 3/4 gallon in a gallon jug) with it. Like making a big starter.
Or make a regular stirred starter with it.
But then again, how rare is it? Irreplaceable?
You could with dry yeast, sure.If there is any concern about its viability, they just make a starter with it.
Somewhat related to the original question... My basic understanding based on the little reading I have done so far is that the advantage of liquid yeast tends to produce cleaner beer in terms of the taste. The downside being questionable viability which turns into more involvement to prepare the yeast such as doing a starter. Now the part that is loosely related to the original post. The advantage of dry yeast is that it is pretty much always good to go even after the expiration date and questions of viability are mostly tossed out the window, making the ease of use much higher than that of a liquid yeast. The downside being that the finished product does not tend to come out as clean as if a similar style liquid yeast had been used. Not to say it produces inferior beer... Seems based on what I have read that the final outcome tends to be a little different.You could with dry yeast, sure.
But making starters is much more the terrain of liquid yeasts, which lose viability at a steady rate, especially when not stored refrigerated or mishandled in other ways (shipped in hot or freezing weather). That's what most banter about yeast starters here is about.
Somewhat related to the original question... My basic understanding based on the little reading I have done so far is that the advantage of liquid yeast tends to produce cleaner beer in terms of the taste. The downside being questionable viability which turns into more involvement to prepare the yeast such as doing a starter. Now the part that is loosely related to the original post. The advantage of dry yeast is that it is pretty much always good to go even after the expiration date and questions of viability are mostly tossed out the window, making the ease of use much higher than that of a liquid yeast. The downside being that the finished product does not tend to come out as clean as if a similar style liquid yeast had been used. Not to say it produces inferior beer... Seems based on what I have read that the final outcome tends to be a little different.
I don't mean to hijack the thread. This just raised another question in my head and since we were originally talking about the viability of old dry yeast I thought I would toss this thought in instead of starting a whole new thread.
I could be horrendously off and I hope you guys will correct me if that is the case. That is just based on what I have read so far in my quest to better understand the tiny miracle monsters we call yeast.