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Made high gravity starter, already pitched yeast... now what?

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darkrabbit

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Hey all, first post to the forum, looking for some advice. Be forewarned I am new to liquid yeast and indeed home brewing so when you see what I did you'll understand why :)

Created a starter with 1L of water and 100g DME.. 1L pre-boil. Thought this was what I should have done. Nope. After boil and chilling ended up with ~700mL of wort, pitched WL300 yeast in my 2L flask, now it's on a stir plate. I pitched because I thought that the yeast still had lots of food as the DME volume was adequate, I didn't realize yeast could become stressed. Yet another lesson learned :) next time I know just to dilute the wort with boiling water, chill it some more, and pitch then.

So I have a high gravity starter and I am now concerned I may have just over exerted my yeast. What should I do? I plan on brewing Sunday so I have some options:

1) Use the resulting starter cake on Sunday as is.

2) Make a second starter with this one and do it the right way this time. Can I do this or is my yeast 'damaged'?

I am making a Hefeweizen if that matters. 5gal.

Thanks in advance! This forum is awesome.
 
I say just pitch it in your beer. Depending on the flavor you want from the hefe yeast, people will actually underpitch to stress them and get specific flavors.
 
You must have boild alot if you managed to lose 300ml.

But, there is no big harm. Pitch it and it will probably be fine.
 
Short answer: RDWAHAHB, just pitch as is. You'll be fine.

Long answer: 100 g to 1 L is about the same ratio of DME to water I use to make starters. Let's say that puts you in the 1.040 ish zone. Boiling 30% of your volume off will put you in the 1.057 zone. Yes, that is high for a starter. But people repitch yeast from primary yeast cakes at that gravity all the time. The yeast companies say not to repitch yeast from a high gravity ferment, but they seem to define that as 1.060-1.065 or so. You are still under that cutoff, so if I were in your position I'd just pitch it.

I boil my starters for about 15 minutes and never had an issue. As long as you don't boil it to a syrup, the temperature will be constant at around 212F at a boil, regardless of how long you boil it, so the amount of time it takes to cool it will not change. Personally I add a little water during the boil to compensate for boiloff in my starters. Usually it's less than a cup in a 2L starter.

Just my $0.02.
 
Thanks all, I feel a lot better about it now. I put it on a stir plate for 26h, now it's in my fridge. I never saw the activity, but I put it on the stir at 8:30PM and didn't check again until 1PM next day so I likely missed it. The cake is starting to show, it's quite exciting, looking forward to Sunday brew!

To answer, I boiled for 15 mins. It's what I read, so that's what I did. I THEN decided to check here and a lot of people only boil for a few mins, so I think that's what I'll do next time. I guess I wasn't sure what the purpose of the boil was, I thought it was to 'cook' the DME, but if it's just to sanitize I guess I only need a minute technically...

Thanks again!
 
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