I'm with the OP.
I have done this when making starters on my stirplate. When I step up a small starter to a much larger one (i.e., 4L), I get it stirred up well and pour into my hydrometer jar, then cover the jar with foil so the hydro sticks out a hole. Just dumped one of these "satellites" yesterday.
In my experience, not only do the final gravitys match, but I think the rate of fermentation is almost exactly the same. To be honest, I don't watch it too closely, so it hasn't been a very scientific test, but I will make a point of watching it closely in the future. I won't refute the papers and references in this thread, but it is such a simple thing to do I'd recommend trying it yourself to see if some of that "wisdom" is actually myth. Many of the posters in this thread are big proponents of questioning some of the tribal knowledge passed down (HSA or secondaries anyone?); I'm surprised at their responses.
I have done this when making starters on my stirplate. When I step up a small starter to a much larger one (i.e., 4L), I get it stirred up well and pour into my hydrometer jar, then cover the jar with foil so the hydro sticks out a hole. Just dumped one of these "satellites" yesterday.
In my experience, not only do the final gravitys match, but I think the rate of fermentation is almost exactly the same. To be honest, I don't watch it too closely, so it hasn't been a very scientific test, but I will make a point of watching it closely in the future. I won't refute the papers and references in this thread, but it is such a simple thing to do I'd recommend trying it yourself to see if some of that "wisdom" is actually myth. Many of the posters in this thread are big proponents of questioning some of the tribal knowledge passed down (HSA or secondaries anyone?); I'm surprised at their responses.