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repitch at bottling?

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jfrank85

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Got an RIS that has been sitting in the basement for 6 months now, 3 setting and 3 on bourbon oak. OG was 1.092 and fg as of 6 months ago was 1.025. I used Edinburgh yeast from white labs and used a huge starter from a yeast cake from a small oatmeal stout. Question is, should I repitch new yeasties when I bottle? Should I add priming sugar to the bottling bucket? Fyi the beer was mashed at 156F and had a thick mash with oatmeal and other unfermentables. Thanks for any and all replies, quite the noob when it comes to higher abv brews.
 
Got an RIS that has been sitting in the basement for 6 months now, 3 setting and 3 on bourbon oak. OG was 1.092 and fg as of 6 months ago was 1.025. I used Edinburgh yeast from white labs and used a huge starter from a yeast cake from a small oatmeal stout. Question is, should I repitch new yeasties when I bottle? Should I add priming sugar to the bottling bucket? Fyi the beer was mashed at 156F and had a thick mash with oatmeal and other unfermentables. Thanks for any and all replies, quite the noob when it comes to higher abv brews.

Similar situation for me earlier this year. I opted to re-pitch with a 5 oz packet of US-05 4 days before bottling. Yes, I added my priming sugar to the bottling bucket and then racked the beer on top.
 
Funny, I was thinking I typed the rest of the story....

It turned out great. One of the best beers I have made to date. Perfect amount head and good retention.

One of the problems you can run into on high gravity beers is the yeast can sometimes go into a state of shock and cause the beer to take a long time to carb up. With that long of a bulk age the yeast that's left will in fact settle into the cake and there may just not be enough to carb properly.

This is the advice I got from my LHBS and it seemed to work for me.
 
Ok well I was contemplating using safale 05 to prime with, is that advisable or should I stick with my original yeast?
 
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