I've upped my max volume to 6 gals now as I find I have the room in most of my fermentors. When making a beer with an ABV as high as ~7% would you make a starter if using US-05/S-04/T-58? Or is it enough to handle the larger volume on its own?
Wouldn't two packets of yeast be way over pitching for 6 gals?
Were I brewing a low ABV beer I wouldn't be concerned, but with them being a bit high I'm wondering if the yeast count is a little low for 6 gals, which is why I wondered if a small starter wouldn't be necessary.
Starters benefit any beer
all you are doing with a starter is making sure the yeast is awake and active, ready to go. the side benefits is it populates the starter solution and the yeast count is so much higher, and that helps a lot
when you pitch yeast, it has been sitting around dormant, and you wake it up, by making a starter the yeast is woke up and excited by the time you pitch it,
when yeast hits the wort, it will populate that and go to town eating the sugars, the more you pitch the better,
SO make starters if you want better fermentations
Not with dry yeast, which is what he's asking about. Do not make a starter for dry yeast, just use 2 packets instead of one if you need a higher cell count.
I think this is a personal thing guys, and your own results should dictate your policy. I know I get greater results with a starter, I do not need to look up someones book to tell me my results are wrong.
after all if everybody did this the exact same way there would only be 1 style of beer.
no problem with the quote, we all have our sourcesSorry, I guess quoting Palmer is a bit nerdy of me. Admittedly, I'm not the most experienced home brewer so I often turn to Palmer's book for advice (plus the great ppl at HBT). You have a point though, do what gets the best results for you.
so tell me, if such is the case, why do the big guys use starters? they could just use dried yeast.
just pitch the amount needed, it would make sense and they could close down that expensive department they have culturing yeast and getting cell counts up to where they want them to pitch.
I am just asking. not arguing
I think this is a personal thing guys, and your own results should dictate your policy. I know I get greater results with a starter, I do not need to look up someones book to tell me my results are wrong.
after all if everybody did this the exact same way there would only be 1 style of beer.
Professional brewers don't do starters when they use dry yeast. I doubt doing a starter will hurt anything, but the yeast counts in dry yeast are very high. The starter will probably not increase the number of cells, but it will get the yeast active. Breweries do starters because they are re-pitching yeast from previous batches. A pitch of yeast for a brewery is pretty expensive, so they reuse the pitch for 5 or 6 batches.
My results as of just yesterday prove that making a starter has improved the performance of dry yeast
I've not heard of:
"If you toss a packet of dry into starter wort, some of the cells (up to half according to Dr. Cone) die before they can reconstitute their cell walls."
And so what you are saying is I'll need to make a standard size starter just to get it back up to a proper pitch rate. I have to admit that this doesn't make sense to me. I've not had to make large starters when using liquid strains to make up for what died. but I can't say that I know the science behind it all.
I've not heard of:
"If you toss a packet of dry into starter wort, some of the cells (up to half according to Dr. Cone) die before they can reconstitute their cell walls."
And so what you are saying is I'll need to make a standard size starter just to get it back up to a proper pitch rate. I have to admit that this doesn't make sense to me.
I've not had to make large starters when using liquid strains to make up for what died. but I can't say that I know the science behind it all.
the reason I avoid forums is that there are always so many guys who want to argue a point to the ground in their view