i never pitch vials without starters,regardless of age.have allways used mr malty pitching calc.it has never failed me yet,but have never had a vial a month past best b4.to me 10% viable vial is akin to reculturing 2 stubbies worth of cpa,and i allways step up for that,tho my rinsed yeasts that usually end up say 15ml in volume go straight into a 2litre starter tho there usually only 2 weeks in age from harvest till they go into a starter,this grows me 80 to 100ml of yeast.the 500ml step up aint a hassle so im gonna go with it for peace of mind.thanks guysAssuming a single batch volume of 23L, a 2L stir-plate starter is about the ideal size.
Since your vial is old, stepping up rather than pitching directly into 2L should in theory give you better yeast health and more growth, so it's something that I'd do.![]()
Try the Hombrewdad yeast calculator - I've had good success with it (admittedly, I've only done 2 liquid yeast batches so far though). Apparently it's a bit more accurate than the Mr Malty one, it tells you exactly how big each step needs to be, and you can adjust more variables yourself (eg. starter wort strength, overbuilding the starter, etc.)mckenry said:Just thought I'd show you all what Mr. Malty and yeastcalc claim as 0% (zero, not a typo) viability. Smacked this yesterday afternoon. This is this morning. Ive had correspondence with Kai about this and there is no answer. Its 4 months since manufacture date, but clearly alive and well.
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Whack a sample under a microscope and do a viability test, that's the only way to check viability. What you have there is a swollen packet.mckenry said:Just thought I'd show you all what Mr. Malty and yeastcalc claim as 0% (zero, not a typo) viability. Smacked this yesterday afternoon. This is this morning. Ive had correspondence with Kai about this and there is no answer. Its 4 months since manufacture date, but clearly alive and well.
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