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How far can yeast go with a starter? 10, 15, 20 gal??

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user 227424

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Just beginning to make starters, and not sure I fully understand the science of yeast. Can a single Wyeast or Safbrew be multiplied any number of times, to pitch any number of 5 gallon batches, in theory?

I'm about to make a starter and divide it in half to pitch two 5gal batches and wondered how far one could go with it? Three, four, six 5gal batches??

Thanks!!
 
Use a calculator like this and play around with the numbers:
https://www.brewersfriend.com/yeast-pitch-rate-and-starter-calculator/
You can make a 4 gallon starter to ferment 50 gallons with a single vial for example.
So to answer your question, it is dependent on how big you make the initial starter.


I don't remember where I read it but it isn't advisable to harvest yeast more than 8 times.
I also just realized this has nothing to do with what you are asking about.
 
All other metrics being equal, the volume of a starter vessel will pretty much set an upper limit on yield.
You can literally get into the case that pitching from one starter to a fresh batch of starter beer will have unity gain - or even lose cell count.

If you have a large enough vessel you can crank out enough yeast to pitch any size batch.

I favor the Brewer's Friend starter calculator for a number of reasons, one of which is the heads up it'll give when you get into the above scenario...

Cheers!
 
It sounds like you are asking how many times the yeast can be used, not how large of a batch you can make. I asked a similar question recently and the answer is "it depends". You can use it until you get a mutation that causes a characteristic in the beer that you dislike, then start with a fresh packet.
What i do is, using a fresh packet or vial of yeast (or dregs from bottles as was the case with my latest batch) and using the brewers friend calc or mr malty calc i make a starter roughly 1 1/2 times larger than what i need for the batch. Cold crash, decant most of the beer and pour 1/3 of the starter into a sanitized mason jar to use for a future starter. I pitch the 2/3 left over into my current batch.
 
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