If star san does anything to a yeast slurry, I'd think it lowers the p.H., not raise it.
If star san does anything to a yeast slurry, I'd think it lowers the p.H., not raise it.
How do you know the yeast isn't dying?
I'd wager that once your star san hits the yeast slurry, the P.H. instantly goes too high and your star san is basically cloudy water with no killing ability. Next time, put your slurry into jars and settle it out. Decant the liquid and pitch a tbs full of slurry into a mason jar full of properly mixed star san and see what happens to your yeast...
Star san has to kill yeast or else you'd never be able to make a batch of beer with a low attenuating strain of yeast with the same gear you used to make a batch with a high attenuating yeast strain. If the star san didn't kill the high attenuating strain, it would always end up fermenting your wort to its attenuation level. You'd also never be able to make a beer with a neutral yeast after using a Belgian etc...
this all is 100% false.
Star san has to kill yeast or else you'd never be able to make a batch of beer with a low attenuating strain of yeast with the same gear you used to make a batch with a high attenuating yeast strain. If the star san didn't kill the high attenuating strain, it would always end up fermenting your wort to its attenuation level. You'd also never be able to make a beer with a neutral yeast after using a Belgian etc...
So here's a thought (and maybe it was brought up but I missed it): if this immobilization technique greatly reduces ester formation, then does fermentation temperature control become far less critical? From what I've seen the immobilized yeast balls worked slower in side-by-side tests vs. normally pitched yeast at typical fermentation temperature...but what if you could run the yeast ball fermentation at ambient temperature--or even warmed, maybe even 90+°F?--and still get a clean flavor profile? I imagine it would HAVE to run faster at elevated temp?
Additionally, I would love to see how the IPA came out and if there were any clarity issues.
I want to know if anybody has used the beans in place of slanting yeast.Bump for curiosity![]()