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DME/Water Ratio for Starter ?

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goudaphunk

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I am going to brew this weekend. I planned on using the following ratio for DME/Water ratio.

1/2 cup of DME
2 cups of water

The beer I am brewing has an OG of 1.072. Would this starter be powerful enough or do I need to up my numbers?

Cheers,
Jimmy
 
I have also been told I could use the formula of

1500 ml of water and 1 cup of DME.

Thanks!
 
I use weight not volume for my starters. 50g DME to each 500ml water. You could up that a bit for your .072 start. Either way you should be OK.
 
The ideal range for a starter is 1.030-1.040, correct?

Yes that is ideal.When was the yeast produced?The viability may be different if it is a couple months old and you may under pitch if so.Yeastcalculator.com will show how much yeast you actualy have and need.
 
Go by weight not by volume. Volume is inaccurate due to how densely the DME is packed it the cup. If you pour it into a cup you will have less DME than if you scoop out a cup which will compact it more.

1 to 10 ratio. So if you are making a 1 liter starter you use 100 grams of dme. 1.25 L needs 125 grams 1.5 L needs 150 grams etc etc etc.
 
By weight for 1.040:
8oz (228 gr) DME per 2 Liter
4oz (114 gr) DME per 1 Liter
1oz (28.8 gr) DME per 250ml
0.5oz (14.2 gr) DME per 125ml

Hope this helps
 
So, I just made a tester starter, minus the yeast pitching. I used 1500 ml of water and 150 grams of DME. My OG, using a refractometer was 1.045. I am assuming that is too high? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks.
 
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