For lagers I usually do a 2L starter, siphon off the beer and add another 2L of wort. Adding 4L would be best for making new yeast but my container would not work with 4L
I also add pure O2 with my starters to goose them up a bit.
I don't see the big deal. It's prior to the "best if used by" date. I've used plenty of WL packs/vials that were 3-5 months old (and older). I make a starter for all yeast and have never had one crap out on me. I even grabbed a 1-yr old pack of 530 for free and stepped it up and it performed fine in a light Belgian Pale. Of course, I live within miles of a WL lab and usually get very fresh yeast (from the local brew shop) and prefer that; however, I've never noticed a huge difference. Using Homebrewdad at 35% a proper-sized started should get you the yeast needed.
For lagers I usually do a 2L starter, siphon off the beer and add another 2L of wort. Adding 4L would be best for making new yeast but my container would not work with 4LI also add pure O2 with my starters to goose them up a bit.
First… Just do a nice fatty starter. If there's one live cell in there, it will do the wild thing and eventually you'll have everything you need.
Is asexual reproduction really that wild?
Lots of dead yeast at the bottom of my starter which hasn’t kicked off yet by the way. I guess I’ll buy new yeast somewhere esle. Any recommendations for yeast less than 3 months old?
Glad I mill my own grains. If I had crushed grains waiting for yeast. Well never mind
maybe you could email MoreBeer and offer to pay full price for all their 5 month old yeast that way people who do care wont get it. that is a win win win.
I have no interest in pitching a tripel at 35%
I like MoreBeer. Yeast is a tough one. Homebrew shops hate dealing with it and is more of a risk than other items. Some guys at my LHBS told me that White Labs forces them to buy from a distributor, so the yeast is at least 1 to 1 1/2 months old when it arrives at their store. The yeast has a stated six month shelf life but we all know how important it is to be on the front end of that time period. Upon reading the thread I expected to hear the outcome you experienced. If yeast is within the six months window it is sellable. I had a shop sell my out of date yeast. When I noticed the starter was dead I looked on the package and found the expired date I took it back to them. They himmed and hawed and really did not want to do anything about it until I started getting pissed. Then they pulled some more for me.
Why should I ruin my batch because WL has an inventory system that sets up the LHBS to fail? It is a bad situation but yeast are at the heart of it all. Over time I always check on the date and if ordering specify to look for it.
As a side note: The same guys at the LHBS told me that Omega is approaching the market with direct shipping and growing up order per order from homebrew shops. Basically call up, order, they make it and ship it. Plus they have 150 million cell packs. Might be worth some support.
Please don’t tell me how to make my beer..I don’t want to use your pitch rate. I have once, I will never again. I am trying to dial in my Tripel. That doesn’t involve using bad pitch rates. I pitch my Belgians at 1.25. That isn’t a debate, a judgement, or up fo discussion.It wont be 35% after a giant starter. This isn't rocket science. If a starter is done correctly, even with a reduced number of cells to begin with, you can easily achieve the proper number of yeast. If anything, the manufacturers dates are conservative IMO, as described by Dr. White himself. I've been brewing for 25 years and have a few WL vials/packs under my bealt. I realized long ago worrying doesn't make yeast grow., it sure makes the hobby less fun, though. Cheers!
It wont be 35% after a giant starter. This isn't rocket science. If a starter is done correctly, even with a reduced number of cells to begin with, you can easily achieve the proper number of yeast. If anything, the manufacturers dates are conservative IMO, as described by Dr. White himself. I've been brewing for 25 years and have a few WL vials/packs under my bealt. I realized long ago worrying doesn't make yeast grow., it sure makes the hobby less fun, though. Cheers!
Please don’t tell me how to make my beer..I don’t want to use your pitch rate. I have once, I will never again. I am trying to dial in my Tripel. That doesn’t involve using bad pitch rates. I pitch my Belgians at 1.25. That isn’t a debate, a judgement, or up fo discussion.
Please don’t tell me how to make my beer..I don’t want to use your pitch rate. I have once, I will never again. I am trying to dial in my Tripel. That doesn’t involve using bad pitch rates. I pitch my Belgians at 1.25. That isn’t a debate, a judgement, or up fo discussion.
I just think we are talking past each other. To use your train of thought, I'm simply saying you can get the desired pitch rate using an appropriate-sized starter, even with yeast at 35% viability, most of us do that all the time. Pitch rate is a function of cell number and volume, right?. Desired cell numbers are achieved with an appropriate-sized starter as determined by one of the many calculators available. The % viability is simply an input variable to help determine size of starter wort needed to gain a desired number of cells (a la pitch rate). Worse case scenario with slightly older yeast is you have to use a little more starter wort to get the same number of cells (or a step starter), and just maybe have a little more lag time in your starter. If done correctly, the end result is the desired pitch rate regardless if 35% or 90% viability. Cheers!
1) I have no interest in investing the time or the DME to make a 3 step starter because someone sold me 2 packs of old yeast. I'm not okay with that. I'm not going to be okay with that. Telling me to be okay with that is not gonna work
first off--.4 is 40%, so not that dead after all. Personally I do starters so I only have to buy 1 pack of yeast. If I need more then my 2L flask will hold I make a small beer (5 gal batch) , repitch that yeast and instead of tossing the starter beer I drink it. My last Triple was repitched from a Blonde Ale.
per MoreBeer's own calculator, each contained 400 Million cells yesterday. In order to step that up would take at least three steps for each package
I would dismiss MoreBeer's calculator, except for arguing a claim with them.36 hours
This makes me wonder how much experience you have in making starters. Of course you should combine both packages of low cell count and make a one starter from that. That's a factor 2 gain right there, which multiplies along...In order to step that up would take at least three steps for each package
I would dismiss MoreBeer's calculator, except for arguing a claim with them.![]()
As mentioned before, Homebrew Dad's yeast calculator estimates haven't steered me wrong either. I have made well over a 100 starters over the years, many from 2-4 months old yeast packs, as that seems to be common availability.
Even the fresh vial from WhiteLabs' Yeast Vault I received a bit over a month ago took a good week to yield a decent starter, followed by a 2nd and 3rd one to ramp up cell count for 2 separate pitches. This was shipped under ideal conditions, no hot or frozen zones along the route.
This makes me wonder how much experience you have in making starters. Of course you should combine both packages of low cell count and make a one starter from that. That's a factor 2 gain right there, which multiplies along...
Especially when you expect the yeast to be in poor condition, due to age, mishandling, stressed from overheating/freezing, etc. you'd actually start with a much smaller starter volume (say 0.25-1 liter) at a reduced gravity of 1.020 or even 1.010, to prevent any more stress on her weak cells. Then step up from there.
Yes, it will likely take 3 steps that way, and probably 2-3 weeks in total. But you'll end up with a good pitch of viable yeast. Save some out for a next batch, after putting all that work into it...
This is not to say you should accept MoreBeer's poor supply and handling of the case without friction.
Back in March I found 2 different WLP PurePitch sleeves of lager yeast in a 'yeast box' in the back of my fridge I never got to use. They were well over 2 years old! They both were revived with a 3 tier step-up, and yielded a large amount of yeast ready to pitch. The starter made with the older of the 2 actually lifted off several days before the younger one, she seemed to be of better overall health. This goes to prove that age doesn't mean everything.
When you often need larger pitches, as in this case, consider getting a 2nd starter setup. Remember: Factor 2...
You only need to buy 1 sleeve (really!) => make a 2 liter starter => as long you get good growth (good healthy yeast), cold crash and decant => split into 2 starters, stir concurrently => you should have your 600-some billion cells.
If growth in the first starter is less spectacular => cold crash and decant => make a new 2 liter starter before you split.
I have revived less viable yeast with a 2-3 stage starter process over 48-60 hours with good results.It's liquid yeast and it's a shade under 5 months old.
Unless u got a bunk pack to begin with, or it was shipped poorly, you had more than that going into your starter. No way to accurately measure cell number by eye and a Mason jar, sorry. That looks like a bunch of good yeast to me ready for a second round of starter. Sure there is some trub in there too. Sorry, man, you are worrying way too much. I hope it all works out and your beer turns out awesome. I'm sure it will with your dedication to a healthy batch of yeast. Good luck.
For any new brewers reading this I will reply
1) obviously there wasn’t more than that going into the starter. If about 700 million cells went into the starter that would explain both the time and yield. Strangely enough, that is a median point for yeast calculators
2) One actually can measure ml or ounces from a graduated mason jar, hence the graduated part
3) the large off color at the bottom is what brewers who harvest yeast call trub
4) I am not pitching that in my beer and no I don’t believe it is ok to get ripped off buying yeast.
5) things rarely turn out awesome by accident
Here is an excellent article on yeast harvesting and separating yeast from trub
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/forum/threads/yeast-washing-illustrated.41768/
I recently harvested DuPont yeast from a saison which cleared the beer in 6 days with no stall That was fun