Well I did this and all I got was more of the same. It almost seems like the yeast is stuck in white clumps like cheese curds and they sink to the bottom first. Does this make sense? Is the white stuff yeast and the brownish stuff not yeast?
I proofed one with sugar and it came to life super fast. Looks like it worked!
Your yeast farming skills are complete, young Skywalker.I just followed these instructions a week or so back with some NW Ale yeast (Wy1332). Pretty simple procedure, and I ended up with 4 jars of washed yeast.
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I already made a starter with one of them over the past weekend, and it took off like a rocket. I used it in for my Graff, and fermentation started within about 8 hours.
Many thanks to Bernie Brewer for the great walk-through!
Sugar bad. DME good.
So I had a nice Pale Ale with WL 029 (Kolsch) yeast where I washed the yeast.
Unfortunately my jars don't look like they have as much yeast as the other photos I've seen on this thread, and I'm not sure why (or if it's even that bad).
Quick question. I gave up looking after 12 or so pages. I noticed someone said you brew with the same yeast but does it matter what beer you brew ? You guys aren't brewing the exact same beers with the washed yeast. Just the brews that use the same type of yeast, correct ? Was that clear ? I have been drinking.
Gammon, that's right. The amber colored fluid is the beer itself. The stuff on the bottom is the yeast that has settled out and separated from the beer. Like the FAQ said, you want to dump as much beer as you can without disturbing the yeast on the bottom (which isn't too hard). Then, when you have minimal liquid, your yeast slurry will be concentrated, which is just easier overall for the whole process.
Is that beer drinkable then? Definitely a stupid question, but I'm a newb! Thanks!:fro:
It is! It is beer after all right?![]()
Consider it a right of homebrewing passage to drink it. And then chew on a hop pellet to round out the experience!
Actually it would be beer. (uncarbonated and watered down from the washing process) You do rack off the majority of it but there will still be some there which is how you are getting that amber color.
depends on how many i had before i did it![]()
Fantastic Post, thanks OP.
Quick question, I'm about to bottle this weekend and would like to keep the US-05 from my primary using this method. If I were to brew a day or two after would I just pitch into a starter?
Haha, I was thinking that. Not sure if I'm skilled enough, this will be my first bottling adventure. Not to mention I'm brewing Thunderstruck Pumpkin which looks quite labour intensive.