hotbeer
Opinionated Newb
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I've only ever used dry yeast. While beer recipes using dry yeast say to aerate the wort in the FV before pitching, the dry yeast makers say it's not necessary. They also say direct pitching without making a starter is okay.As for dry yeast... you just pitch directly into the fermenter? No rehydration?
I've always direct pitched dry yeast, but my first handful of brews I aerated the wort. But after I quit aerating I actually think I had better tasting beer. They say it makes no difference for oxidation since the yeast gobble it up so fast during kraeusen, but I'm not so sure. However I will admit that at the same time I also got better at controlling other things that contribute to oxidation potential.
If you are using liquid yeast or re-using yeast that was formerly dry for the previous batch, then I would say you have to aerate. And with liquid your brew day will be slightly more complex.
Even if it's just the complication of coordinating getting the freshest liquid pack possible for the day you want to brew. With dry, I can have them in the fridge for months on end and brew on the spur of the moment... assuming I'm not out of malts.
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