I am just completing my 2nd brew using my new 7.3 gallon conical from Stout Tanks. It is my first attempt at saving the yeast for a subsequent brew. After determining that FG had been achieved, I dumped the yeast and was shocked at the amount. This is Wyeast 1968 (London ESB). I started with one smack-pack with a 1 liter starter. After fermenting 5.5 gallons of a 1.053 APA I got a lot more yeast than I expected. Is this a normal amount of yeast? If so, how much of it should I repitch for the next brew? Here is the picture:
That looks about right. I usually get about a liter. Maybe less.
Good. Thanks. I also just went to Mr. Malty and noticed they had a repitching function.
Misread, or read too quickly.
I wouldn’t repitch the full volume. I get about a liter of yeast from my batches. If I was using it right away, I’d repitch about half.
If you use the full amount, your probably overpitching.
But, Mr. Malty says I need 117 mL of slurry. I’ve obviously got 7 times that. Is there any easy way to get the right amount, or do you just guesstimate?
Sorry, posted just as you were. That works. About 1/2. Thanks!
I guesstimate. Short of counting cells you really don’t know what you have.
Obviously it depends on your OG, too. I’m typically repitching into big beers so I’ll go with a big pitch.
Go with Mr. Malty if that’s your comfort level.
We’re posting over each other.
My conference call is obviously boring.
You won’t go wrong with 1/2, but if you want to try and be more accurate go with Mr. Malty.
It will work either way, especially with a fresh slurry.
I think Mr Malty also assumes a density to the repitched yeast, which you may not be at. You have to look at My Malty’s documentation about that. When repitching yeast to a big beer, I use about half of the yeast from the small beer.
1/3 repitch of fresh slurry for similar gravity ales; 1/2 for lagers. A little more if less than really fresh or if a bigger beer for the repitch. Nothing scientific, but it has served me well. After a couple weeks or so, I would want to consider a starter from the slurry using a couple tablespoons of the slurry.
I figure 1 bill per mill. But I rinse with sterile distilled. Five gallons of 1.050 ale gets 250 ml. Five gallons of 1.050 lager gets 375. This makes great beer for me, but I’m not suggesting it’s the way to do it.
Is that everything that dumped from the cone or is that yeast rinsed out from the trub?
I stick a flask like that in the fridge, let it settle for a couple days, then pour off about 75% of the liquid that is on top of the compacted slurry. Then I “sloosh” that around (I think that’s a technical brewing term, right?) to loosen the slurry, and measure whatever Mr Malty calc says for my beer’s OG and the yeast’s harvest date. It’s worked great for a couple years. I think I may be over-pitching a hair, as some beers start fermenting in 4 or 6 hours after pitching, but it works for me.
Serial dilution is pretty easy. Once you’ve done it once for a given strain and harvesting equipment/technique, you can go with that number and get fairly good precision.
That is everything dumped from the cone - no rinsing. How important is rinsing? Here is a pic taken today:
Whenever I think of rinsing yeast I try to envision a method where it is not exposed to airborne contaminants, and I don’t come up with anything. I’m probably being too anal about it. I just want to do it right - that’s the bottom line.
Its just a bottle/yeast/hop fridge/freezer, but Yike! I need to get a hose in there!
The two sliders on the mr malty repitch calculator control the density (thin to thick) and the purity (more or less yeast) however without a cell count it’s hard to say. I generally just leave the sliders in the middle unless there is a lot more gunk for some reason (lots of hops or whatever) and then wait till it’s nice and compact like in your second pic and call it thick or move it to pretty thin and use the first picture volume.
Thanks Jonathan
I’ve never rinsed my slurries and have stored them like that for long periods of time.
There’s two kinds of people in this world, my friend. Those who rinse their yeast, and those who don’t see the benefit.
IMO, rinsing yeast makes no difference.