Wich is the better bock yeast

So, the perfect yeast to make one of those fruity alcopop “wine coolers”?

You should not make a starter with dry yeast. Just pitch more yeast. Dry yeasts already have their glycogen reserves stored up and making a starter can cause them to use those reserves if the starter is not large enough. For 5 gallons of 1.050 wort 2 packs would have been all you need. If you made a starter with one pack in say, 2 L of wort you likely did more damage than good.

Regardless, a 7 hour lag time on a lager is pretty damn good so not sure why you would be stressing that. Brewing in a commercial environment daily I usually have 14-24 hour lags on my lagers.

That is interesting, and a bit different than the response I received a while back to the question of whether there was any downside to doing yeast starters with dry yeast, other than the time and planning involved.
  Something I’m struggling to understand is why our brewing yeasts don’t behave like almost all other organisms. It is almost a universal constant that organisms will reproduce up to the limit of the carrying capacity of their environment. If they start with a smaller population when initially entering a new environment they will take longer to reach capacity, but will eventually do so. What are the specific factors that make this so problematic with brewing yeast? Hopefully any responses will not be too far over my head.

Major is only responding about dry yeast and how they are prepared in the lab before packaging. Liquid yeast does pretty much work in this fashion.

The issue is that for best beer quality, you want the yeast to replicate only 3-4 times.

Thanks Denny. I get the fact that we don’t want too many generations of reproduction if we wish to maintain beer quality and yeast performance. What I don’t get is how we have available year in and year out consistent yeast strains that obviously are uncounted generations descended from their original progenitors. If there is so much genetic degradation after 3 or 4 generations that beer quality is compromised, how do the folks who provide us with yeast manage to overcome this instability?

You are putting a lot more stress on your yeast during fermentation than what a lab does when it replicates a strain, and they have pure cultures to fall back on. Even then, some mutation probably does happen over time.

But even that isn’t what denny was talking about. He is saying that you don’t want the yeast growth to be too great during the fermentation.

Is that because you want to initially pitch enough yeast to be sure to win the yeast/bacteria replication war or is there  some other reason?

The lab has a master culture and subsequent cultures are made from that.  They replenish the master occasionally.

Dave, I’m not saying you’re wrong, but why would those be better suited to steam beer?

I dunno… what does the term “California Lager” mean to you?

I’ve never used S-23 so maybe that’s just another crap yeast that should not be sold, that’s what I’ve gathered.

I guess I was thinking of the S-23.  I’m not of the opinion that any lager yeast fermented warm can be used for common, but I’m also not an expert on it.

I used S-23 in a recent Tropical Stout - turned out nice and tropical fruity.

Bingo, FTW.