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Need advice on pitching starter ASAP!! Wort is in fermenter, waiting for yeast!

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pinkfloyd4ever

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So I just got done brewing a Two-Hearted clone. I've been stepping up a yeast starter from the dregs of 2 bottles of Oberon on my stirplate since Tuesday. Yesterday I stepped it up a 3rd or 4th time and put it into a 2L flask. I put it in the fridge today at about 3:45 when I was starting the mash. [it's currently 9:45 here] It looks like there's still a lot of yeast in suspension, and maybe not as much as I'd like to pitch at the bottom....at least compared to when I crash cooled and decanted a few days ago.

BUT my wort is chilled and in the fermenter waiting for yeast. I was very careful (borderline anal) about sanitation throughout the starter and brewing processes.

Should I
A) decant now, wait for starter temp to reach wort temp and pitch?
B) leave it in the fridge a few more hours, then decant, warm and pitch?
C) put it in the freezer to speed up the flocculation?
D) pitch the whole starter now? (though I don't really want all that crap wort in my 2 hearted baby)
or
E) something else?

link to photos: http://picasaweb.google.com/kevin.gentsch/Homebrewing#
 
Was the starter going well? Did you have good activity and kraeusen? Did you have a yeast cake prior to putting it in the fridge?

My last starter (1 liter) ran for 1.5 days; had nice activity and a little kraeusen. Prior to putting it in the fridge there was already a nice yeast cake forming on the bottom. I put it in the fridge for about 3+ hours; more yeast dropped out; I decanted all but 200-300 mls; swirled the yeasties back into solution, and then pitched. I had activity in about 3 hours and full fermentation in less than 12.

I would say that if you don't want the liquid in your starter in there, then decant all but a little bit (as long as you have a yeast cake on the bottom).

Good luck.
 
Take the starter out of the fridge, bring it to room temp and pitch it.
 
Option E) Plan better next time. ;)

If it was me (I don't like pitching the entire starter) so I'd leave it overnight, let the yeast settle, then pitch just the yeast.
 
ya, about an hour after I posted I decided to go ahead and warm it to room temp and pitch the whole thing. I think I was freaking out a bit much, but I guess that happens when you're doing something new.

Anyway, the airlock was bubbling like a champ this morning.
 
ya, about an hour after I posted I decided to go ahead and warm it to room temp and pitch the whole thing. I think I was freaking out a bit much, but I guess that happens when you're doing something new.

Anyway, the airlock was bubbling like a champ this morning.

Relax. You'll be fine. As long as your starter was not infected, any flavor contributed by the starter wort will be minimal. Say your batch was 5 gal (19l). Pitching a full 1L starter would give you a volume of 20l, meaning that your starter wort made up for no more than 5% of the total volume in your fermenter. If you leave your beer in the primary 2 weeks (or longer) like many of us on this board, your yeast will be busy cleaning up any off flavors/aromas (diacetyl, oxidation, acetaldehyde) in both your main beer wort and your starter beer.

I used a 1.5 l starter of WLP320 (American Hefe) a couple of months ago. Even chilled overnight, once I got to about 800ml in the flask, it became apparent that decanting was going to lose a bunch of yeast that were being kicked up into suspension again. I decided to take the risk and pitch the remaining 800 ml.

No off flavors whatsoever.
 

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