Tim F
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 28/1/08
- Messages
- 645
- Reaction score
- 7
Hi all, just wanted to share an observation in case it's interesting to anyone. A few weeks ago, I saved about 500ml of Wyeast 3068 yeast slurry from a brew, and stored it in the fridge. Last weekend I pitched half of this straight into a rye beer. Fermenting at 18C, I saw some airlock activity after 12 hours, and krausen at 24 hours. All seemed ok but after a few days it seemed to stall, and I have had to swirl the fermenter round to wake it up again.
Yesterday I made a wheat beer with the rest of the yeast, but this time I boiled a couple of tbsp of dry malt extract in 500ml water, added the remaining slurry to the flask, and bubbled air through it for 8 hours (using a .4 micron filter + aquarium pump). This time I saw strong airlock activity in 3 hours and had massive krausen within 12 hours. This one was fermenting at ambient temperature so it probably got down to 15 overnight too, but it didn't seem to mind!
I didn't aerate either wort at all - thought it was interesting how much difference it made giving some oxygen to the starter, even for just a few hours. Feeding it before pitching probably helped to wake it up as well. I think I will be doing this again!
Yesterday I made a wheat beer with the rest of the yeast, but this time I boiled a couple of tbsp of dry malt extract in 500ml water, added the remaining slurry to the flask, and bubbled air through it for 8 hours (using a .4 micron filter + aquarium pump). This time I saw strong airlock activity in 3 hours and had massive krausen within 12 hours. This one was fermenting at ambient temperature so it probably got down to 15 overnight too, but it didn't seem to mind!
I didn't aerate either wort at all - thought it was interesting how much difference it made giving some oxygen to the starter, even for just a few hours. Feeding it before pitching probably helped to wake it up as well. I think I will be doing this again!