I hear a relative lot about washing yeast for repeat use, and everyone seems to focus on the limits in terms of 'generations', etc. Why wouldn't you just split it off into a new starter before you brew, and before you expose the yeast to all the stress and potential contamination? As long as you fridge it and feed it and decant it to remove dead cells now and then, what's to stop your yeast starter from outlasting the 10 or 12 or whatever generations that supposedly limit washing techniques?
Apologies if this is elementary stuff, I didn't have any luck with a search. I just heard that even commercial brewers supposedly use washing, and that seems like a really unusual way to use yeast.
Apologies if this is elementary stuff, I didn't have any luck with a search. I just heard that even commercial brewers supposedly use washing, and that seems like a really unusual way to use yeast.