ultravista
Well-Known Member
When I first made a starter with WLP007, it was very much clotted and looked like egg drop soup. For those of you that know WLP007, you know what I'm referring to. A gloppy gelatinous mass of yeast.
Today I am using washed WLP007 from a previous brew, an Arrogant Bastard clone.
The yeast is about 6 months old at this point, kept around 40 (f) in the keezer.
I made a 1.8L starter (on a plate) Thursday evening around 6PM, today at 8AM Saturday, it does not appear to be doing much of anything.
There's a lot of "cake" settled at the bottom of the flask and little teeny tiny bubbles escaping the cake every so often. The cake is probably the yeast that I pitched. Before pitching, I tasted the yeast and it wasn't funky; no off flavors or odors. It passed the "does it taste or smell bad" test.
The difference however is the cake is not WLP007 like, not congealed or "egg drop" like. It looks just like any other yeast I have used before (e.g. Pacman), powdery and light.
After a resting period, turning the stir plate back on, the yeast is powdery when mixing back into the mass. Very different from how it was the first time making the starter.
Any ideas as to what might have happened? Regardless of generation, it should act the same way, right?
Has anyone else seen this with WLP007?
Today I am using washed WLP007 from a previous brew, an Arrogant Bastard clone.
The yeast is about 6 months old at this point, kept around 40 (f) in the keezer.
I made a 1.8L starter (on a plate) Thursday evening around 6PM, today at 8AM Saturday, it does not appear to be doing much of anything.
There's a lot of "cake" settled at the bottom of the flask and little teeny tiny bubbles escaping the cake every so often. The cake is probably the yeast that I pitched. Before pitching, I tasted the yeast and it wasn't funky; no off flavors or odors. It passed the "does it taste or smell bad" test.
The difference however is the cake is not WLP007 like, not congealed or "egg drop" like. It looks just like any other yeast I have used before (e.g. Pacman), powdery and light.
After a resting period, turning the stir plate back on, the yeast is powdery when mixing back into the mass. Very different from how it was the first time making the starter.
Any ideas as to what might have happened? Regardless of generation, it should act the same way, right?
Has anyone else seen this with WLP007?