kombat
Well-Known Member
It is a fact that not rehydrating can produce great beer. It only takes a single data point to prove it but I have many.
Whether or not rehydrating produces better beer is not the question. At the end of the day, it's all about pitching rates. If you're sprinkling the yeast directly into the wort, but you're accounting for the decreased viability rate by pitching twice as much, then the beer will still turn out fine. But if you've calculated your yeast pitching rate assuming 100% viability, but employing a pitching method that's been proven to diminish viability by up to 50% (i.e., sprinkling dry), then you're underpitching.
And surely we can all agree that underpitching definitely results in sub-par beer, right? Or are the contrarians even going to dispute that? Are we now saying that it doesn't matter how much yeast you pitch, or how you pitch it, as long as you pitch some yeast, the beer will turn out the same? Is anyone really willing to go on record with such a ludicrous position?