I have been using dried yeast lately so I havent needed to aerate. But last weekend i used a liquid yeast, first time in ages. I didnt aerate my wort but gave my 1lt yeast starter a good shaking before adding it and within a day it was going silly.
I know yeast takes up the oxygen to multipy but if you have a good yeast count to start with is it necessary to oxygenate?
I have been using dried yeast lately so I havent needed to aerate. But last weekend i used a liquid yeast, first time in ages. I didnt aerate my wort but gave my 1lt yeast starter a good shaking before adding it and within a day it was going silly.
You still need to aerate the wort, regardless of dry or liquid yeast.
I know yeast takes up the oxygen to multipy but if you have a good yeast count to start with is it necessary to oxygenate?
This is a good question. If you pitched enough yeast to ferment out the entire wort you would technically not need to oxygenate the wort. BUT, yeast produce esters during their growth phase which form an important component of the final flavour profile of your finished beer. If you didn't oxygenate, you wouldn't get these esters and your beer would suffer for it. This is especially true of beers that have the ester profile as a highlight - weizens, belgians, english ales etc. In fact, some people will recommend under pitching on weizens and belgians in order to emphasise the banana esters which are produced during the yeast growth phase.
Try this on your next batch - keep everything the same as the previous batch except aerate your wort. See if there is a difference and tell us about it.
As for aeration, wyeast did some work on the effectiveness of different aeration techniques. Taking out the option of a pure oxygen system, the best methods were:
aquarium pump with airstone for 5 minutes
shaking the wort container vigorously for 40 seconds
The surprising result was that these two methods gave equivalent dissolved oxygen in the wort. So the good news is if you haven't got an aquarium pump and airstone setup you can exert a bit of energy and get the same results.
edit: spell
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