Was going to use some white labs 545 for a strong dark belgian. It was discounted at the brew store because it was past it's prime date by a month. I've never done a yeast starter before and was excited to get that learning curve going.
Problems:
*I didn't have 2-3 days to let krausen form and a cold crash before my brew date. I was going to pitch it at high krausen, BUT
*in my haste, I didn't let the yeast warm to room temp.
So, I ended up using 2 packs of safale T-58 in a pinch.
NOW I have had 3 days of the 545 starter looking good. HOWEVER, I went with Palmer's DIY starter method for airlock on the starter: a sanitized Jim Beam bottle with a large piece of plastic wrap covering the majority of the bottle and a rubber band loosely holding the plastic in place.
So I'm afraid of infection.
I'd like to cold crash the starter, pour off the 'beer' and split the yeast between two old white lab vials I've got.
Thoughts? Tips? Wisdom?
Problems:
*I didn't have 2-3 days to let krausen form and a cold crash before my brew date. I was going to pitch it at high krausen, BUT
*in my haste, I didn't let the yeast warm to room temp.
So, I ended up using 2 packs of safale T-58 in a pinch.
NOW I have had 3 days of the 545 starter looking good. HOWEVER, I went with Palmer's DIY starter method for airlock on the starter: a sanitized Jim Beam bottle with a large piece of plastic wrap covering the majority of the bottle and a rubber band loosely holding the plastic in place.
So I'm afraid of infection.
I'd like to cold crash the starter, pour off the 'beer' and split the yeast between two old white lab vials I've got.
Thoughts? Tips? Wisdom?