kasky99
Well-Known Member
So here's the thing: I live in Japan and brewing supplies are hard to come by. I brewed 10 gallons of beer this weekend and went to make a starter with some recycled yeast from my last brew. This was after I had already almost finished the beer. ( I usually let the beer sit in my fermentation room over night to get down to optimal temperature and pitch the next day.) I opened the jar and the yeast smelled bad. Rotting meat, no doubt in my mind that it was bad, kind of bad. I figured I was over reacting and poured it into another container to let my wife look at it. No doubt, still bad. This left me in an odd spot. With no way to get new yeast without ordering it an with no spare packs of dry yeast (I'm an idiot) this left me with only the half of a pack of dry yeast in the freezer I was using for an experiment. I don't even remember what brand it was because it had been so long. Long story short I split it in half, made two starters, let it go for 24 hours, cold crashed, decanted, and pitched. I know it is going to make beer of some sort, but there is no activity 24 hours later at 64 degrees and not I am not sure what to do. I know the lack of planning is my own fault, but any suggestions other than letting it do it's thing at its own pace?