Can you please clarify - don't you need to oxygenate the wort when repitching yeast? Do you just mean no oxygen exposure between batches?As long as the yeast never sees oxygen it stands a better chance than any other method to be reused.
Can you please clarify - don't you need to oxygenate the wort when repitching yeast? Do you just mean no oxygen exposure between batches?As long as the yeast never sees oxygen it stands a better chance than any other method to be reused.
I agree. If the beer is to be consumed in warm months, I use 34/70. If it will be consumed between November and Febuary, or is copper colored or darker, I use S-189.This is true. I just relistened to a Master Brewers podcast about Fermentis' profiling of their 34/70 yeast. The bottom line was that they came to the conclusion that it is an extremely stable yeast and it's profile was virtually unchanged from 51F to 68F. The biggest thing that changed with lower temperatures was that the fermentation was prolonged and it needed a larger pitch.
https://www.masterbrewerspodcast.com/216
I probably won't ferment my pils at 68, but I will likely move it up to 55-56F and see how it goes.
Home brewing tends to be very prone to fads because a lot of people prefer silver bullet solutions to the mind numbing boredom and frustration inherent in slow iteration. Mexican lager yeast is just a recent fad. It'll pass, like all the others.I'm confused by the nature of Mexican Cerveza. What is it? Everyone seems to be talking about a kind of lager, but it looks a long way away from a pilsner. I see it contains corn and I know (or I think I know) that cream ale is also heavy on adjuncts. Is there a difference?
I don't think I've ever tasted either style. We have something called Corona here, but it looks very industrial and mass produced. Any clarification would be most welcome.
I mean about transfer and storage. The old mason jar approach that we have all done is a horrible way to keep yeast alive. Closed transfer into a CO2 purged brink pretty much just puts them to sleep. Oxygen + food = activity. CO2 without much food = sleep. So a keg of fermented beer turns out to be a decent place to store yeast.Can you please clarify - don't you need to oxygenate the wort when repitching yeast? Do you just mean no oxygen exposure between batches?
Very useful thank you. Knowing that there's a history, means there's, no doubt, literature to be found somewhere.Anyway, that's a very quick and dirty explanation. Others know more about this than I do, so I should probably quit while I'm ahead. I hope you found this useful as a starting point.
I've found that brews fermented at very low temps need a D rest to work out the D as well as other yeast by products. Most of the time I'm running "cone to cone" or continuous brews, putting new wort on a full liter or more of yeast cake/fresh last brew, so there is no question of an underpitch.I would say pitching enough yeast is more important than a D-rest. Homebrewers often under-pitch lagers. You want to gang up on a lager with a ton a fresh, healthy yeast. Then one does not need a D-rest because the yeast power through and do not leave any off flavors. The idea of a D-rest is to get the yeast to eat up any by products that they did not consume because they were worn out. If they were strong, they would consume the by products even at low temperatures.
How much is enough yeast? Everyone will balk at this but 4-5 packs for a 5 gallon batch. Then you will see a lager fermentation act like an ale fermentation. The main reason everyone says to 'be patient with lagers' is they most likely under pitched and the yeast are overwhelmed with the task at hand. So they take forever. I am not saying this to point fingers as I have struggled with this myself. I say it to help improve everybody's lagers.
Pitch a lot of yeast. I mean a lot a lot and then capture that yeast cake into a yeast brink (CO2 environment, no oxygen cold storage) and repitch all of the yeast for the next batch. Then you will get your money back for the 4-5 packs and have better fermentation to boot.