Hjandersen
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Plus, the actual culture is much more pure than the dry yeast, meaning you can re-use that yeast more than you can with dry yeasts.
Could you give a reference here?
Plus, the actual culture is much more pure than the dry yeast, meaning you can re-use that yeast more than you can with dry yeasts.
Could you give a reference here?
I don't have any specific references to scientific journals or anything, but the process of drying the yeast is not completely sterile. That is why dry yeast has had such a bad reputation for so long. The processes have become significantly better, allowing less bacteria into the product, but it is not a completely pure source. This is what I have heard from people in the business, not my personal experience.
That said, the only craft brewery I have heard that uses dry yeast doesn't take it out as many batches as those that use liquid yeast.
That said, I've used Nottingham on 4 consecutive batches without problem. Just because it's not 100% pure, doesn't mean its unusable. The yeast cell count is so high it out-competes anything else. The problem is, bacteria reproduce much quicker than yeast do, and each consecutive batch has higher and higher bacterial counts.
Yeast deformity plays a big role in re-using yeast.
Vile is disgusting. Vial not vile!!!
So, here's an update. It took me a long time to actually implement Hjandersen's strategy, but I did before Christmas, and it worked. That said, it might have been OK without the US-05, rehydrated and acclimated to the wort, because SG had dropped to 1.017 before I pitched it. Anyway, the gravity is finally down to 1.015, apparent attenuation of 75%! I've racked it on top of the bourbon, oak cubes, and vanilla bean.
It actually didn't taste terrible before I did that, either, which was a bit of a surprise, as my expectations have dropped very low for this one. Maybe the US-05 cleaned it up a little. The smoky porter notes are starting to come through.
Thank you for all your help, and I'll post back with final tasting notes, eventually.![]()
That's great! I'm looking forward to tasting notes. Don't forget to let it attenuate completely before bottling. Also cold crashing is (as always) a good idea!
That's great! I'm looking forward to tasting notes. Don't forget to let it attenuate completely before bottling. Also cold crashing is (as always) a good idea!