Wyeast 2 litre starter - pour off the liquid ?
Wyeast 2 litre starter - pour off the liquid ?
I'm doing a London Pride clone & after using Jim's method to split the Wyeast London ESB 1968 into 5 I've got a two litre starter bubbling away.
I'm thinking that as I don't want 2 litres of unhopped beer to taint the main batch I'll pour off the liquid & add some of the cooled post boil wort to the demijohn to 'swill out' the yeast cake & pitch.
Any thoughts on my method, good/bad etc. ?
Cheers
I'm thinking that as I don't want 2 litres of unhopped beer to taint the main batch I'll pour off the liquid & add some of the cooled post boil wort to the demijohn to 'swill out' the yeast cake & pitch.
Any thoughts on my method, good/bad etc. ?
Cheers
you will want the slurry of a liter starter for the correct amount of yeast
I usually let it ferment and put it some where cool to settle out, i have heard some people putting it in the fridge. them i pour of the excess liquid and pitch.
If you want to save some you could split the starter before its finished one part of the wort the other to re split and saved in the fridge?
I usually let it ferment and put it some where cool to settle out, i have heard some people putting it in the fridge. them i pour of the excess liquid and pitch.
If you want to save some you could split the starter before its finished one part of the wort the other to re split and saved in the fridge?
I'm actually brewing it today & the starter is bubbling away like a lava lamp so it looks like a go-ersubsub wrote:I generally take the wort from early in the boil as I can check if my starter is still alive pre pitching
I've already split the pack into 5 already so I think I'll pitch the whole cake from the 2 starter.oblivious wrote:If you want to save some you could split the starter before its finished one part of the wort the other to re split and saved in the fridge?
Thanks for the advice chaps

I usually make my starters (2L) a week in advance on a stirplate. When they're done. I put them in the fridge until brewday. I then take them out to warm up, decant off the liquid and then add some cooled wort from the boil (after it's been boiled for 10 minutes). This seems much more effective than just decanting and pitching. Since starting to do this I'm getting much better starts. This weekend I brewed 10G of a 1.047 Belgian Single. The airlock was bubbling within three hours of pitching and was pretty much fermented out after just two days (WLP-500 at 20C).
Between 1-1.5L. I draw if off into a separate flask, cover it with foil, give it a little boil on the hob just to make sure the flask is sterile then cool it in the sink. Usually you get a bit of hot/cold break in the flask so I decant the cooled wort off that when I add it to the flask with the yeast in it.