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I am confused about starters and starter calculators.

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natewv

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When people say "1L starter" what the hell are they talking about? I have a stir plate and a 1Lflask. I wish I had a bigger flask but I don't.

When I read "how to make a starter" threads or the Wiki I feel like I have always been told to use 2 cups of water with 1/2 a cup of DME. That's like a 300ml starter.

When I go to yeastcalc, I am asked for my "starter volume" (mr. malty just says I need a 1 L starter, usually). What does that mean? There's the stepping option on yeastcalc, which makes sense, but I don't understand how "big" my starter needs to be. I just feel like the calculators are nice and all, but they don't complete the circle and actually tell yo uhow to do it. For example yeastcalc says mix the "appropriate" amount of water and DME...why would tat be a user-defined value?

I guess what I'm asking, is given my equipment, let's say I want to make a starter for a 1.6 or so 5.25G ale. I'll use yeastcalc, I guess I can step it, but I haven't really been able to determine what "size" I need to start with that won't hurt the yeast. If I need to step it, I will, I just don't see any direction. What am I missing?
 
Here's an easy rule of thumb:

You need 100g DME per 1L of starter you intend to make.


So, put 100g of DME into your flask, then fill it up with cold water up to the 600ml mark or so, boil it for a bit, then top it off with sanitized water to the 1L mark. You can, of course, just fill it to the 1L mark before you boil, but it's easy to get boilovers that way unless you're careful.


If you are looking to step up a starter, a good rule of thumb is to double the size every step.
 
Here's what I do, it may not be exactly equivalent, but it seems to work for me:

When I'm told I need a 1L starter, you can essentially do 2 500mL starters. Make a 500mL starter, let it finish, cold-crash (in the fridge), decant the old start liquid off leaving yeast behind, and then use that in a new 500mL starter.

As for the SG of the starter, that more depends on your recipe and the age/condition of the yeast. The older/smaller amount of yeast you have, you want to start off with a lower SG on the first round, then higher on the second. Also, a bigger beer will need more yeast, so you may have to do a few extra "rounds" or "step-ups".

Edit - or do what weirdboy said to get your 1L starter
 
A 1L starter is 1 liter of ~1.035 wort. From a typical White Labs or Wyeast package, you probably want to limit your first step to about 1L. Some people go straight to a big 2-4L starter successfully, but I've seen quite a few good sources recommend against making a jump like that. I believe the standard practice for stepping up is to double your starter size with each step.

Generally, you shouldn't need to make huge starters unless you're really brewing a big beer. For a 1.060 5gal batch, 1L should be plenty.
 
Here's what I do, it may not be exactly equivalent, but it seems to work for me:

When I'm told I need a 1L starter, you can essentially do 2 500mL starters. Make a 500mL starter, let it finish, cold-crash (in the fridge), decant the old start liquid off leaving yeast behind, and then use that in a new 500mL starter.

Don't do that. It doesn't work like you think it does. You may get a few new viable cells, but for the most part it is a complete waste of effort unless you actually expand the volume of wort the yeast have to work with. The yeast grow to a sufficient density occupy that volume of wort, so decanting and adding more wort isn't going to increase the amount of viable cells.
 
A 1L starter is 1 liter of ~1.035 wort. From a typical White Labs or Wyeast package, you probably want to limit your first step to about 1L. Some people go straight to a big 2-4L starter successfully, but I've seen quite a few good sources recommend against making a jump like that. I believe the standard practice for stepping up is to double your starter size with each step.

Yeast manufacturers claim that a vial or smackpack is good for 5 gal. of 1.050 wort. While we all doubt that, they're certainly fine for 3 qt. of 1.035 wort. My own experience over hundreds of batches bears that out.
 
Don't do that. It doesn't work like you think it does. You may get a few new viable cells, but for the most part it is a complete waste of effort unless you actually expand the volume of wort the yeast have to work with. The yeast grow to a sufficient density occupy that volume of wort, so decanting and adding more wort isn't going to increase the amount of viable cells.

Well then, thank you. Learn something new everyday ;)
 
...From a typical White Labs or Wyeast package, you probably want to limit your first step to about 1L. Some people go straight to a big 2-4L starter successfully, but I've seen quite a few good sources recommend against making a jump like that....

Yeah, I've seen this recommendation a bunch of times, too, but it doesn't make sense to me. After all, a single package of liquid yeast is supposed to provide enough cells to ferment 2-2.5gal of wort, and I'd be willing to bet that everyone here has successfully made 5gal. of beer with just one smack pack or vial, so how come the same amount of yeast can't handle more than a 1-2L starter?!?
 
Here's an easy rule of thumb:

You need 100g DME per 1L of starter you intend to make.


So, put 100g of DME into your flask, then fill it up with cold water up to the 600ml mark or so, boil it for a bit, then top it off with sanitized water to the 1L mark. You can, of course, just fill it to the 1L mark before you boil, but it's easy to get boilovers that way unless you're careful.


I'm going to just use a regular pot to boil and use the flask for the stir plate.

So what you are saying is a 1 L starter is made with approximately 1 L of wort. However if I were to cold crash and decant the starter wort...that 100 ml or whatever of slurry is equivalent to 1 L of wort?
 
I'm going to just use a regular pot to boil and use the flask for the stir plate.

So what you are saying is a 1 L starter is made with approximately 1 L of wort. However if I were to cold crash and decant the starter wort...that 100 ml or whatever of slurry is equivalent to 1 L of wort?

Yes, the starter volume recomended is the wort volume of the starter.

If your starter is small enough (about 1L on 5 gallons - or ~5% total beer volume) you can get away with not decanting, but it is recomended you decant. After all, starter beer is basically oxygenated beer. While at 5% it may not be noticed and the yeast may do more chemical reactions with it, it is better to not add it. - (I've had to add because a wheat yeast wouldn't floculate fast enough, so I pitched it all).
 
So what you are saying is a 1 L starter is made with approximately 1 L of wort. However if I were to cold crash and decant the starter wort...that 100 ml or whatever of slurry is equivalent to 1 L of wort?

The amount of yeast growth/reproduction is dependent on the gravity and volume of the wort. If you have a bigger starter, you're going to end up with more yeast in the end. The decanted slurry is what you're after. If you have a 2L starter, you'll have more of that slurry than if you have a 1L starter.

In your example, the 100mL slurry isn't equivalent to 1L of starter wort, it's the product of a starter made with 1L of starter wort.
 
Don't do that. It doesn't work like you think it does. You may get a few new viable cells, but for the most part it is a complete waste of effort unless you actually expand the volume of wort the yeast have to work with. The yeast grow to a sufficient density occupy that volume of wort, so decanting and adding more wort isn't going to increase the amount of viable cells.

Wait, are you saying that stepping up a starter doesn't work if both steps contain the same volume of wort (even though the 2nd step is fresh wort pitched atop a slurry of new daughter cells from the 1st step)? This is more sugar for the yeast to eat and multiply so I don't understand why it wouldn't work.

In other words, are you saying that the below process won't work as planned, and you'll just be left with somewhere around 190-200 billion cells???...

s.jpg
 
Don't do that. It doesn't work like you think it does. You may get a few new viable cells, but for the most part it is a complete waste of effort unless you actually expand the volume of wort the yeast have to work with. The yeast grow to a sufficient density occupy that volume of wort, so decanting and adding more wort isn't going to increase the amount of viable cells.

Not according to YeastCalc... Going by that calculator, doing a stepped starter, .5L to .5L, yields 216 billion cells (if you start from 100billion), where doing a straight 1L strarter yields 224. Granted, there's a LOT less growth in the second step than the first, but you still get in the same ballpark for the final yield.

Either that calculator is flawed, or stepping as he suggested would be a pretty passable substitute.
 
I have no idea about the math behind yeastcalc, but in general you are not really increasing your viable yeast cell count by repitching on the same volume with the same SG wort. It is possible you will get some additional cells due to increasing the number of healthy cells you start with, but it is much better to increase volume.
 
Someone posted 100g of DME in 1L. On that yeast calc page, there is a small side box that tells you how much DME in oz, to use for a certain size starter and certain SG. Easy. They also have a help page that discusses the step-up process, but is essentially the same info as stated here. But in greater detail.

I had a question about a starter I made recently. I planned to step up for enough cells for my 11gal batch of 1.043 OG stout from two fairly fresh packs of PAC-man yeast.
I put in the fridge to cold crash the first stage, but it had not fully flocculated or settled out by the time I was needing to step it up with the second dose of wort. I didn't want to lose any yeast, so what I did, was to transfer the entire volume into a larger flask, and then add additional cooled wort into the larger volume flask.

Does this make any difference in the resultant amount of viable yeast cells versus decanting first? Also, why would it make a difference between two 1.5L starter steps, versus a single 3L starter?

One of these days, I'm going to brew a batch of 1.035 wort and pressure can it for making starters. I always say that but then I never actually do it! If you're going to pressure can it, do you need to bother boiling it first? Maybe I should do a search on this separately...

TD
 
Wait, are you saying that stepping up a starter doesn't work if both steps contain the same volume of wort (even though the 2nd step is fresh wort pitched atop a slurry of new daughter cells from the 1st step)? This is more sugar for the yeast to eat and multiply so I don't understand why it wouldn't work.

In other words, are you saying that the below process won't work as planned, and you'll just be left with somewhere around 190-200 billion cells???...

I think what weirdboy was saying was that the growth was minimal. If you look at the pic you posted you will see that your cell count didnt increase very much. You go from 179 billion cells to 260 billion when you pitch it into the same amount of wort.

Your growth factor was .45 = very little growth. Typically speaking if you want to have the greatest impact on yeast growth you increase pitching volumes by factors of 10. This doesn't mean it the only way, it just means that's the best way to have the highest growth factor.

The calculators work for a baseline but there are some discrepancies between all the people who are published on yeast. Chris White, Jamil Zainasheff(sp?) and Braukaiser all have different mathematical calculations for how they arrive to their estimates. The real question is who is right?

I have recently purchased all I need to do yeast cell counting (which is a lot let me tell you...) and plan on figuring out which method seems to be the most accurate. I have an LCD microscope, hemocytometer, and all the other various equipment needed and just recently began this process. Took me a while to figure out how to do everything but I did my first official cell count last night.

I took a scrape from a slant and made a 10ml starter which I built up for 24 hours. My first count thus far is 275 Million cells. I pitched this amount last night into 110ml of fresh wort on a stir plate. By Jamils estimates I will have 3.29 Billion cells, by Braukaiser I will have 15 Billion.

Thats a huge difference! 3.29 Billion as opposed to 15 billion. Jamil is giving a growth factor of 11.6 and Braukaiser is giving a growth factor of 53.8.

I will report back later tonight to see what my growth was.
 
I took a scrape from a slant and made a 10ml starter which I built up for 24 hours. My first count thus far is 275 Million cells. I pitched this amount last night into 110ml of fresh wort on a stir plate. By Jamils estimates I will have 3.29 Billion cells, by Braukaiser I will have 15 Billion.

Thats a huge difference! 3.29 Billion as opposed to 15 billion. Jamil is giving a growth factor of 11.6 and Braukaiser is giving a growth factor of 53.8.

I will report back later tonight to see what my growth was.

So I just took my count and it looks like I am falling in between Jamil & Braukaiser. I have 7.3 Billion cells in my 110ml starter.

I just pitched this into a 1000ml starter on a stir plate, and will report my findings tomorrow. Jamil says I will have 54 Billion, Braukaiser says 147 Billion.

My guess is that I will end up around 100 Billion.
 
I have been contemplating buying the stuff do to my own yeast counts. How much did it all cost?

TD

Microscope was $179.99, Hemocytometer about $40, 10 micro-ml pippette $21, 100 micro-ml pipette $21, 1000 replacement pipette tips $15 (these will last forever), 100 disposable 3ml graduated pipettes $8, test tubes $10, blue stain for viability testing $8. All-in-all about $300
 
Yeast manufacturers claim that a vial or smackpack is good for 5 gal. of 1.050 wort. While we all doubt that, they're certainly fine for 3 qt. of 1.035 wort. My own experience over hundreds of batches bears that out.

My understanding is that doing steps will give you more total cells in the end than just going straight to 4L; yeast health is about the same either way. I don't have any personal data to support that, and I rarely go much higher than 1L anyway. I certainly don't have the microbiology knowledge to have strong convictions about one method or the other.
 
My understanding is that doing steps will give you more total cells in the end than just going straight to 4L; yeast health is about the same either way. I don't have any personal data to support that, and I rarely go much higher than 1L anyway. I certainly don't have the microbiology knowledge to have strong convictions about one method or the other.

And if I need those extra cells, I do a stepped starter...sure. But for almost all of the beers I make I can get a sufficient cell count wih single 2-3 qt. starter so there's nothing to be gained from doing steps.
 
My understanding is that doing steps will give you more total cells in the end than just going straight to 4L; yeast health is about the same either way. I don't have any personal data to support that, and I rarely go much higher than 1L anyway. I certainly don't have the microbiology knowledge to have strong convictions about one method or the other.

Based on the curve in YEAST I go about 1 to 1.5 L when doing a vial/slap pack. Much more and you don't get as much growth per L, much less and you don't get much growth period.
 
So if I understand correctly...

1L water, 100g dme, boil cool and pitch. Wait 1 day on a stir plate.

Refrigerate, decant spent wort

Add slurry to:
2L water, 200g dme, boil cool, then 1 day on stir plate

Refrigerate, decant spent wort

Etc.... Correct? Or am just not getting this.
 
So if I understand correctly...

1L water, 100g dme, boil cool and pitch. Wait 1 day on a stir plate.

Refrigerate, decant spent wort

Add slurry to:
2L water, 200g dme, boil cool, then 1 day on stir plate

Refrigerate, decant spent wort

Etc.... Correct? Or am just not getting this.

Pretty close, except it's not 100g DME + 1L water, more like 100g DME + enough water to make 1L wort. Same goes for the step to 2L, naturally.
 
Pretty close, except it's not 100g DME + 1L water, more like 100g DME + enough water to make 1L wort. Same goes for the step to 2L, naturally.

You are talking about the loss during the boil, right?

Make sure you have a consistent gravity, but keep increasing the volume by 1L...
 
Either way works fine, you just get a slightly different starting gravity.
100g DME + 1L water ~= 9°P ~= 1.036
100g DME + 0.9L water* = 10°P ~= 1.040

* water has a density of 1.000(g/cm-1) at 4°C and is 0.9982(g/cm-1) at 20°C. For practical purposes 1L of water is 1kg.

It doen'st change things much, but both the Plato and Brix scales are w/w not w/v.

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brix
http://morebeer.com/brewingtechniques/library/backissues/issue1.3/manning.html

DME has a density of about 1.5(g/cm-1), so 100g of DME and topping off to 1L will give you a gravity of about 9.7° P (1.039).
 
Yeah, I've seen this recommendation a bunch of times, too, but it doesn't make sense to me. After all, a single package of liquid yeast is supposed to provide enough cells to ferment 2-2.5gal of wort, and I'd be willing to bet that everyone here has successfully made 5gal. of beer with just one smack pack or vial, so how come the same amount of yeast can't handle more than a 1-2L starter?!?

No one wants to take a crack at this? I really am puzzled by the frequently made recommendation to pitch a White Labs vial or Wyeast smack pack into a mere 1L of 1.040 wort when making a starter. It seems to me that either package should be more than capable of handling a 2-4L starter directly, or am I missing something here?
 
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