robd
Active Member
how do you do a yeast starter
Here's my tips on yeast starters:
1. They are VERY necessary for every beer in order to ensure not only a quick start, but optimum attenutation.
3. Don't forget to add a yeast nutrient.
What he was writing applies ONLY to liquid yeast. Dry yeast needs to only be rehydrated and pitched. It's so easy that I recommend all new homebrewers start out with dry yeasts, after all there is so many great strains available these days.You would do this even for liquid yeast? I've always just let it go to room temp and pitched it. It always has started within 48 hrs. Would I see any benefits from doing a starter?
2. ACTIVE aeration of the starter wort is best, and by active I mean using an aquarium pump with an in-line filter. Boiling removes nearly all the dissolved oxygen from the wort. Aerate the starter wort for 30 minutes.
You would do this even for liquid yeast? I've always just let it go to room temp and pitched it. It always has started within 48 hrs. Would I see any benefits from doing a starter?
No way would I use an aquarium pump and a filter to aerate a starter. If you don't have a stir plate, just shake it. Shaking it will get the same amount of O2 as an aquarium pump and is much easier. Were only talking about 1-2 liters instead of 5 gallons.
I just started tracking my apparent attenuation also and I got 71% on my last brew WLP004 Irish Ale Yeast, I think now I need to concentrate on better oxygenation of the wort to increas attenuation, but thats a horse of a different color.
Aerate the wort with an aquarium pump, too. I aerate my wort for 30 minutes, pitch the starter, and then aerate for another 30 minutes. The result? Lag times of less than 4-5 hours, complete fermentation in about 4-5 days, and attenuation rates that are at the top of the published ranges.
Why not use an aquarium pump? We're not looking for sterile conditions, just sanitary.
Aeration: another sorely overlooked point in the brewing process. You would have to shake that starter wort for a long, long time to get the amount of O2 into it that you can get with an aquarium pump.
Aerate the wort with an aquarium pump, too. I aerate my wort for 30 minutes, pitch the starter, and then aerate for another 30 minutes. The result? Lag times of less than 4-5 hours, complete fermentation in about 4-5 days, and attenuation rates that are at the top of the published ranges.
When did I say anything about sterile conditions or not being sanitary.
You can only get so much O2 into your starter from using the air from the atmosphere. How are you going to get any more O2 in a 1-2 liter starter by using an aquarium pump than I am by shaking it?
And when did I ever say to overlook aeration? I the only thing I said was it was a waste of time to use an aquarium pump in a starter. I agree it may be easier to aerate 5 gallons of wort with a pump. I myself use an O2 bottle with a stone. Way easier and I don't have to aerate with an aquarium pump and wait for 30 minutes to an hour.
Sorry semi-hijack...
Last night around 10pm est i made my first starter... kolsch white labs, 1-2 pints of water and gravity up to about 1.040... Sanitized everything with star-san (first time using this stuff). Its now almost 7pm and nothing! No activity... no sediment. I was planning on brewing my all grain kolsch tonight but doesnt seem it will happen... thoughts?
Well, sometimes it takes longer than 24 hours. But sometimes it ferments out and you don't even notice it. If there isn't any yeast laying on the bottom of the starter vessel, though, it sounds like it didn't start.
I usually make my starters a couple of days in advance, if I have time, just to ensure it ferments out. The books I've read suggest pitching the starter at high krausen, but I always seem to miss it, and I wait until it's finished.
In your case, I guess I'd go ahead and brew and pitch the yeast when it's time and cross my fingers.
How necessary is a stir plate? I have some washed hefe yeast I plan on bringing back to life in a few weeks. Can I just shake a container of it when I remember? Bovarian Hefe has become an addiction.
how do you do a yeast starter
I think this has been a very impressive and informative thread considering the apparent lack of social grace and reluctance to search this forum by the OP
the lack of apparent lack of social grace
Now that's just funny...unless you're a cow.Bovarian Hefe has become an addiction.
If you have a stir plate, you are completely wasting your time aerating a starter wort. Sorry.
When you aerate, you are ONLY exchanging the surface area of the wort over and over again to introduce oxygen. You are not "planting" oxygen into the beer somehow.
The motion from the stir bar accomplishes this surface area exchange on a consistent basis, thereby actively aerating the starter wort until you turn the plate off.