Just BTW, if you don't have the time, energy, or equipment to do a multi-step starter >1 gal, dry yeast in a lager works very well. I've used SafLager W-34/70 MANY times and it really does well*.
Granted, it's costly. For a 10-gallon batch (11 into fermenter) I basically buy 4 packs of yeast, sometimes 5 if the OG will be a little higher. That's >$20 per batch on yeast. That ends up costing the same and sometimes more than the total grain bill! So I try to always do two back-to-back lagers, harvesting the slurry for re-pitch on the next batch. That at least halves the per-batch yeast cost, which helps.
But it works.
*Note: I've tried S-23 and Mangrove Jack's M84 IIRC, it was their Bavarian lager strain, and neither really impressed me. SafLager W-34/70 has never failed me though.
Granted, it's costly. For a 10-gallon batch (11 into fermenter) I basically buy 4 packs of yeast, sometimes 5 if the OG will be a little higher. That's >$20 per batch on yeast. That ends up costing the same and sometimes more than the total grain bill! So I try to always do two back-to-back lagers, harvesting the slurry for re-pitch on the next batch. That at least halves the per-batch yeast cost, which helps.
But it works.
*Note: I've tried S-23 and Mangrove Jack's M84 IIRC, it was their Bavarian lager strain, and neither really impressed me. SafLager W-34/70 has never failed me though.