I just tossed some yeast from this last April and June because it looked a little greyish. Used some yeast from June of 2015 for a new starter. How long yeast can be stored is variable. A lot depends upon temperature, sanitation, and fermentation stress. Plan for at least 6 months if your harvest technique is good.
I have used yeast that was 18 months old from my fridge. I had to step up a starter 3 times but it worked and they fermented my batch as they should have.
Yesterday I made two starters and one was abbey ale yeast (wlp530) that was at least that old. I anticipate a lag in growth but should see some activity by tomorrow.
Wow. I may try this. So you are saying I should do my starter gradually. I dont have to do a big one just one liter starter
Thx
Not to be the negative one here but ideally, harvested yeast which has been refrigerated should be used in a week, maybe 2 weeks (depends on the strain). Yes, you can ferment with very old yeast and yes, your beer may be fine but it will be better with fresher yeast. Much depends on the strain of yeast, some can handle stress better than others. Some depends on what the yeast last fermented, was it stressed by temperature, high alcohol, lots of adjuncts, etc.? If you could stain the yeast and look at them under a microscope you'd see how many (or should I say how few) yeast are looking healthy. I used to save yeast (for too long), make up a starter and let it grow up and pitch it, sure that all was fine. Once I got a microscope and saw the condition of my yeast, I changed my practice. So yes, you can brew with old yeast, just like you can brew with moldy LME or stale grain, it just won't give you the best end result. Think of yeast like fresh vegetables: don't forget about them at the back of the fridge.
Amen!
I think if what you are brewing relies on the yeast for more than just an acceptable attenuation level then starting with a pure culture, harvesting in as sterile an environment as possible, using the harvested yeast within a few weeks or a month at most and not harvesting yeast beyond a handful of generations unless you have a way to verify its purity would be beneficial.
Additionally, I think using proper pitch rates, yeast nutrient, sufficiently oxygenated wort and an appropriate PH helps to minimize drift in harvested samples.
At how many generations do you quit harvesting yeast or do you overbuild your starters to use yeast which has never fermented a batch of beer?
I don't mind making fresh yeast so I may be a little conservative but in the summer when I don't have as much time to propagate I harvest more often.
I will direct pitch two weeks after harvest anything longer than that up to a month gets a starter and after a month I toss it in the trash and start from fresh.
Life is too short to brew with old yeast.
At how many generations do you quit harvesting yeast or do you overbuild your starters to use yeast which has never fermented a batch of beer?
I went to BYO boot camp a couple of months back, and what you describe is exactly what Chris White recommends. To the tee.
As for myself, I have pitched 6 week old harvested yeast with no issue. I always measure FG, and performance was on par.
I once used the same pitch 15 times just to see what would happen, and the yeast performance never degraded a bit (I tapped out at 15, but I surely could have kept going).
I made a starter with year old yeast once, just to see what would happen. The yeast performed admirably after being woken up. Beer was great.
It really all depends. I'm not looking to pitch crappy, tired yeast, I just don't find yeast to be particularly fragile when I experiment.