Tips on Yeast Starters.

So, the obvious thing I've found about starters are the following:

1) Yes, they are important. 2) Yes, especially in high gravity beers! 3) Having a starter opens the possibility up of yeast reuse 4) Sanitation is critical.

The less obvious things, I am figuring out. From experience, how can one tell when a starter is ready to be pitched? After a day, mine has slowlying rising bubbles. The highly flocculent White Labs English Ale yeast is sitting on the bottom, fat dumb and happy. Perhaps I should wait another day...? How should I reuse the yeast? Pour some off the starter into my White Labs vial? Take some from after the primary fermentation? (If so, how do I avoid sucking up a bunch of trub??) Is a

1000mL starter good enough for a 1.090 SG beer? If not, I guess I need a bigger Erlenmeyer flask!! Does the yeast change/mutate/grow "tired" after a while and if so, how does one avoid that? People used to make beer without yeast. How long did it take to get the wild yeast in there? How the crap did they make any heavy beers? I've heard an anecdote about Vikings with big family yeast sticks... Is that whats going on?

Steve

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Steven Hay
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