kombat
Well-Known Member
I'm planning on brewing up a 5 gallon batch of Pilsner Lager on the 12th. I figured I need about 400 billion yeast cells. I'm starting with a single "smack-pack" of Wyeast Czech Pils yeast.
I started my starter last night (since my flask is only 2L, so I'll need to do a 2-step starter). I smacked the smack pack, waited 3 hours, then started brewing my starter wort from about 1.8 L of water and 180 g of DME. I boiled the DME (plus 1/4 tsp of yeast nutrient) for 15 minutes, chilled to 60 F in about 15 minutes, poured into the flask, shook the bejeezus out of it for a couple of minutes, while I dipped the yeast packet in StarSan, then opened up the sanitized yeast pack (which had swollen a little by now) and poured in the yeast. Covered with sanitized aluminum foil and wrapped a couple rubber bands to form a good seal that will allow CO2 out. The flask was left on the kitchen counter, at room temperature (probably 65 - 70 F) overnight.
8 hours later, I checked it this morning, and there were no signs of life. All the foam that had been created by my vigorous shaking was gone. The starter actually looked stratified, with a dark layer near the top, then a light brown layer below that, then the rest of the starter, lighter still, toward the bottom. There is yeasty-looking sediment in the bottom of the flask.
Now, I know it's only been 8 hours. And I think I already know the answer ("Be patient!") But the smack-pack had already started to swell by the time I had opened it, and I'm just curious. Is it normal for a lager yeast to take a while to get going?
I started my starter last night (since my flask is only 2L, so I'll need to do a 2-step starter). I smacked the smack pack, waited 3 hours, then started brewing my starter wort from about 1.8 L of water and 180 g of DME. I boiled the DME (plus 1/4 tsp of yeast nutrient) for 15 minutes, chilled to 60 F in about 15 minutes, poured into the flask, shook the bejeezus out of it for a couple of minutes, while I dipped the yeast packet in StarSan, then opened up the sanitized yeast pack (which had swollen a little by now) and poured in the yeast. Covered with sanitized aluminum foil and wrapped a couple rubber bands to form a good seal that will allow CO2 out. The flask was left on the kitchen counter, at room temperature (probably 65 - 70 F) overnight.
8 hours later, I checked it this morning, and there were no signs of life. All the foam that had been created by my vigorous shaking was gone. The starter actually looked stratified, with a dark layer near the top, then a light brown layer below that, then the rest of the starter, lighter still, toward the bottom. There is yeasty-looking sediment in the bottom of the flask.
Now, I know it's only been 8 hours. And I think I already know the answer ("Be patient!") But the smack-pack had already started to swell by the time I had opened it, and I'm just curious. Is it normal for a lager yeast to take a while to get going?