SpanishCastleAle
Well-Known Member
If you were brewing a batch of beer and the primary goal of that beer was to yield the bestest, healthiest washed yeast you could (with beer quality still important but secondary); what would the specs/details of that beer (and process) be? Let's assume the technique used for washing is already set (i.e. just want to focus on the beer being brewed to propagate the yeast).
Would you build up a starter such that you slightly/grossly overpitched? Slightly/grossly underpitched?
What would the gravity of the beer be?
Any change in process? Maybe rack it to secondary early?
Anything specific to avoid? Higher gravity than ~1.060 is well known, anything else?
I'm asking because when I brew that first batch from a new yeast pack/vial (using a starter) I'm usually trying to get the most healthy yeast I can, so it will store better and just generally be more healthy. Not having any problems...just want to see if there is anything i can do to improve it. Let's also assume liquid yeast.
Would you build up a starter such that you slightly/grossly overpitched? Slightly/grossly underpitched?
What would the gravity of the beer be?
Any change in process? Maybe rack it to secondary early?
Anything specific to avoid? Higher gravity than ~1.060 is well known, anything else?
I'm asking because when I brew that first batch from a new yeast pack/vial (using a starter) I'm usually trying to get the most healthy yeast I can, so it will store better and just generally be more healthy. Not having any problems...just want to see if there is anything i can do to improve it. Let's also assume liquid yeast.