I noticed that if I make a yeast starter and pitch it on brew day it makes a mess of my blow off. Meaning I have to be careful to make sure it does not blow off my water the end and have a foaming mess to clean.
If I take the same amount of yeast from a yeast cake (wash, fridged and bring to ferm temp before pitching) it does not blow off the water and has a lot less mess. It seems to have about the same high kraeusen time.
My blow off is a 64oz cup filled about 3" from the top and a 3/4" tube that goes down about 2" under the water.
So my question is should I keep up with the starters and deal with the mess or should I not worry that the yeast cake is not peaking as quick?
If I take the same amount of yeast from a yeast cake (wash, fridged and bring to ferm temp before pitching) it does not blow off the water and has a lot less mess. It seems to have about the same high kraeusen time.
My blow off is a 64oz cup filled about 3" from the top and a 3/4" tube that goes down about 2" under the water.
So my question is should I keep up with the starters and deal with the mess or should I not worry that the yeast cake is not peaking as quick?