InspectorJon
Well-Known Member
I was just looking at this thread and it got me thinking
.
Let’s say I brew a one gallon batch of beer and pitch the appropriate amount of yeast for a 1 gallon batch. I then take that 1 gallon batch at high krausen and pitch it into an a new 4 gallon batch of the wort with the same composition as the 1 gallon batch. It sounds like that should work fine, like a big starter. So why is it not a good idea to start with 5 gallons and pitch the one gallon yeast pitch? I would be starting with the same amount of yeast and ending up with the same amount or beer.
Everything I know says to pitch an appropriate amount of yeast. I’m just not sure why a smaller amount of yeast would not populate the whole batch. I don’t plan to do this, I am just curious about the dynamics.

Let’s say I brew a one gallon batch of beer and pitch the appropriate amount of yeast for a 1 gallon batch. I then take that 1 gallon batch at high krausen and pitch it into an a new 4 gallon batch of the wort with the same composition as the 1 gallon batch. It sounds like that should work fine, like a big starter. So why is it not a good idea to start with 5 gallons and pitch the one gallon yeast pitch? I would be starting with the same amount of yeast and ending up with the same amount or beer.
Everything I know says to pitch an appropriate amount of yeast. I’m just not sure why a smaller amount of yeast would not populate the whole batch. I don’t plan to do this, I am just curious about the dynamics.