LOL
was this playing?
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LOL! No, but I'll put that on the playlist for the next Brew Day!
LOL
was this playing?
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Good job!Braaaiiinnns… View attachment 838774View attachment 838773
Brewing happiness is spinning up an old yeast packet and have it step up and show a lot of growth in just a few days.
Thanks, the only thing I can really take credit for, I guess, is storing it decently and stepping it up in a way that doesn’t stress it too much. I have many old slurries in the fridge as well, dumped some about a year ago. When I see deals on yeast I make purchases with the intention to use it before it gets old. LOL then life happens. It makes sense to use the unadulterated yeast before the slurry, but I hold onto pint and half pint jars “just in case“.Good job!
I’ve had pretty good luck with 3-step up propagations in the past with ’MIA’ sealed factory yeasts that show up unexpectedly long after their “Best By” dates. Not so much with harvested slurry older than 2~3 months, however.
The risk of freezing is the chance that the samples will thaw during a defrost cycle. Less risk if you have an ‘old school’ chest freezer. If you’re using a typical frost free kitchen refer with the freezer on top, the frozen yeast bank will be exposed to a thaw/refreeze cycle ever time the refer defrosts. The cell walls in the yeast will likely burst when this happens.Thanks, the only thing I can really take credit for, I guess, is storing it decently and stepping it up in a way that doesn’t stress it too much. I have many old slurries in the fridge as well, dumped some about a year ago. When I see deals on yeast I make purchases with the intention to use it before it gets old. LOL then life happens. It makes sense to use the unadulterated yeast before the slurry, but I hold onto pint and half pint jars “just in case“.
Thanks for the info about freezing yeast surely that would be more sensible that what I’ve been doing.![]()