HOW TO MAKE & USE A YEAST STARTER
------------------------------------------
TWO DAYS BEFORE BREWING: POP POUCH TO ACTIVATE YEAST
Hold pouch in one hand, firmly "clapping" with the other. Feel
pouch to make sure that inner bubble has burst. Shake pouch vigorously
for a few minutes. Keep pouch at room temperature (65º-80º F)
to allow culture to grow. Pouch should swell as fermentation occurs. If
pouch swells too fast, move to a cooler environment. Avoid temperatures
over 85º F.
ONE DAY BEFORE BREWING: MAKE A STARTER
Simmer 2 tablespoons of malt extract & a half dozen hop pellets in
two cups of water. Cool briefly and pour into a sterile wine or 22 oz.
beer bottle, adding yeast nutrient if desired. Top bottle with an airlock
and #2 stopper, allowing starter to cool to room temperature. Shake vigorously
to aerate the starter. Use a flame to sterilize the mouth of the bottle
and dip the corner of the pouch in sanitizing solution. Snip corner of
swollen Wyeast pouch. Pour contents of pouch into bottle and replace the
airlock. Store at room temperature. Fermentation should begin within 24
hours.
BREW DAY: PITCH THE YEAST
Once wort has been boiled and cooled, aerate it by shaking / rocking the
primary fermenter vigorously for a few minutes to add more dissolved oxygen.
Allow about 15 minutes for trub to resettle. Agitate your starter to rouse
any sediment and add entire mixture to the wort... The yeast will acclimate
to their new environment and use any dissolved oxygen to reproduce. Once
the oxygen is exhausted, fermentation begins. This la g time (the time
between adding the yeast and the onset of fermentation) should be between
3 and 24 hours.
HELPFUL HINTS REGARDING YEAST STARTERS
-
Yeast starters are highly recommeded for all Wyeast "smack-packs!"
Fermentation will begin and finish much more rapidly bydramatically increasing
the pitching rate of your yeast.
-
If you are brewing strong beers (i.e. with gravities beginning over
1.070), starters are even more highly recommended. These worts require
higher pitching rates of yeast and more aeration after cooling.
-
It is generally not necessary to make a yeast starter for the White
Labs Pitchable Brewers Yeast. Still, if you are brewing a high gravity
wort or if your yeast is over 6 - 8 weeks old, it is not a bad idea to
prepare a yeast starter.
-
Please note that lager yeasts work noticeably faster if a yeast starter
is utilized.
-
The limiting factors in minimizing lag time are the amounts of nutrients,
dissolved oxygen and yeast. Yeast nutrient is recommended for extract
based batches, though usually not necessary for all grain batches. Agitating
your primary fermenter to oxygenate your wort usually works well for home-sized
fermentations. If you have problems with stuck fermentations (beers that
do not fully attenuate), you may wish to seek ways of adding more oxygen
to your cooled wort (i.e.: aquarium pumps). One pint of actively fermenting
yeast starter is sufficient for 5 gallons. Using the Wyeast package without
a starter will result in lag times of 2 - 4 days - more than enough time
for wild yeast and bacteria to establish themselves. It only takes a few
cells of these organisms to make their presence known through filminess,
cloudiness, off-flavors or outright spoilage. A healthy yeast starter
will begin fermentation faster, retarding many of these organisms through
the lowering of pH and production of alcohol and carbon dioxide.