millstone said:Ive attempted to wash yeast as a test to see if I can do it, but I think I got poor results. My procedure - After racking the wort from the primary, I pour in about a quart of cooled boiled water and swirled the yeast and water then pour it into a large jar. Wait the 10, 15, 20 minutes for the trub to settle. I end up with a layer of yeast/trub on the bottom and clear water on top nothing suspended .
Sounds like youre doing everything right except maybe missing one step.
Once the sludge is in your jar shake the sh!t out of it to really mix it up. That is was suspends the yeast into solution. The 10-minute settling time is to let unwanted solids like hop and grain particles settle out.
Dont try and get a three-layered effect. Jut remember that 95% of what is in the jar is good, useable yeast. The other 5% is the heavy stuff that will fall out. That cloudy liquid is what you want.
Another thing that people do wrong, is not using enough water to rinse out the fermenter yeast cake. If the solution in the jar is not thin enough, its more difficult for the solids to separate and settle.
Try using those large apple juice jars and fill them half way with water.