well, I have 4 mason jars with washed 3068 sitting in my fridge that I did from my hefe batch 4 weeks ago. going to brew another hef this weekend. my question is... should I create a starter any longer in advance than a smack pack? like should I do it 2 days in advance to make sure it comes out of sleep being that the yeast has been in the fridge for 4 weeks or is 24 hours enough for it?
I recently washed 3 batches of yeast and ended up with 10 mason jars with the bottom cm containing yeast. I know I should make a starter when using the washed yeast but in terms of determining the size of the starter how should I treat the viability of the washed yeast compared to liquid yeast I buy from the HBS?
Wil the washed yeast have a much lower viability and thus should I make a larger starter?
quick question. I have 4 mason jars of 3068 yeast. say I use 1 or 2 to make a new batch. now I have 2 leftover. should I just wash the yeast out of the newly finished batch and use THOSE for my next batches or use the washed yeast leftover from my FIRST washing??
msa8967 said:Anyone know what each of these layers might represent in my yeast starters from washed yeast? I tried making my own starter wort from grain and then canning it so one of these layers might be hot break pieces although I tried to keep that out of the starter.
The yeast is the creamy white thin layer on top of the trub.
The yeast is the creamy white thin layer on top of the trub.
Unfortunately, this was my effort at trying to step up the amount of yeast I harvested from my first batch of washed yeast 10 days ago. I was really hoping that the visible yeast layer would be thicker. I have never seen that much trub before in using washed yeast in a starter.
msa8967 said:I decided to pour off much of the remaining wort to get to the thin layer of yeast and trub. After adding the four contents together this is what I have now in 1 jar. I was expecting to find a thicker layer of yeast but didn't get that as a result. I am not sure why this washing is yielding a much lower yeast value than the other dozen or so I have done.
What a great thread! Thanks so much to Bernie for starting it. I am a fairly new home brewer and am definitely intrigued with washing yeast and using yeast starters. Having said that, I have only perused the first 20 or so pages of this 152 page thread and have a few questions which I'm not sure have been asked/answered yet so let me apologize in advance if they have but here they are:
I am currently using SafaleUS-05 dry yeast(rehydrated prior to pitching) for a brown ale I have fermenting right now and would like to know:
I want to make a strong, barley wine type ale (high OG) so want to make a starter for it and I really like the aforementioned dry yeast so want to use it for the barley wine in a starter.
- Has anyone ever harvested and washed this particular yeast?
- And if you have, how did it work?
I did see a comment from bernie that if you are using a dry yeast he would not bother with a starter and would just rehydrate a new/fresh package of dry yeast.
But, since I know I'll have a really high OG, here are a couple of other questions:
Any opinions/advice greatly appreciated. Cheers.
- Would it be too much yeast to use a fresh pack of dry, rehydrated yeast and a starter made with the same yeast(harvested from the batch I'm fermenting now)
- Or, would it be better(definitely easier) to just pitch a pack of rehydrated yeast?
- Or, pitch two packs fresh dry, rehydrated yeast only (due to high OG)...and this is for a ~5 gallon batch btw.
I just kegged a blonde ale and a cream ale. I screwed up washing the cream ale and only got two jars, but I don't think i'll be doing many more cream ales soon. Thanks for the Thread Bernie. Go Crew!
michaelsnayd said:Great information! How long do these keep?
jwalker1140 said:You do realize that you can use your washed yeast in types of beer other than the type it came from, right? I'm not trying to be condescending. Just want to make sure you get the full benefit from doing this. Currently, I'm fermenting an amber ale with 1056, which was washed from a blue moon clone, which was washed from a cream ale. And on it goes. Props again to Bernie! This is an awesome thread.
MirImage said:Yes I do. The Cream ale yeast I used was WLP080 Cream Ale Mix. I don't think many people have used it on other styles of beer. The other one is saf-05 which I use a lot of.
BPhad said:How did you like the WLP080? Was thinking of trying it on my next cream
BPhad said:How did you like the WLP080? Was thinking of trying it on my next cream ale, I used Nottingham and 1956 on my first two attempts and they both were good.
I haven't tried it besides tasting samples but it was very clean. I wish I could have fermented it at lower temps but its hard for a low budget, apartment brewer in TX. I fermented in the high 60s.
I haven't tried it besides tasting samples but it was very clean. I wish I could have fermented it at lower temps but its hard for a low budget, apartment brewer in TX. I fermented in the high 60s.