Thirsty Boy
ICB - tight shorts and poor attitude. **** yeah!
- Joined
- 21/5/06
- Messages
- 4,544
- Reaction score
- 106
Apparently - the method of propagation and drying used by the dry yeast manufacturers leaves the yeast with a surfeit of nutrients and resources. To such an extent that they dont require oxygen in the wort, they can manage the job on internal resources alone.
After doing a fair amount of research on the topic, it seems that a nice frsh packet of dried yeast, comes with enough inbuilt resources to allow the yeast to reproduce 3-4 times and still have enough internal juice left to finish the job of fermentation and shut down properly cleaning up after themselves as they go.
So the upshot is - a nice fresh pack of yeast with the majority of its contents alive and viable - should have enough yeast cells and internal resources so that they would be able to be pitched into an oxygenated wort at around 11 -13 plato - and not need any added oxygen.
So, according to the manufacturer's spiel - for quite a chunk of homebrew requirements, you shouldn't need to aerate.
I take it with the same level of "oh really" as I apply to the notion that Wyeast smack packs and Whitelabs vials, contain enough cells to pitch without a starter. Yeah - they do, if the pack is fresh, has been well looked after and your wort is no stronger than average. The dry packs, under the same sort of optimum conditions might not need the wort to be aerated.
Me - I aerate anyway. I don't know enough about the history of the yeast to assume its in optimum shape, so I assume it isn't. Besides, I dont want my yeast to have enough resources to do the job - I want them to have resources to throw away before they knock off. I want the best, least stressed yeast I can get; and to work them just hard enough to get some flavour out of their sweat - but no more than that.
Aerating isn't going to hurt your beer, not aerating just might - I know which horse I am backing
Thirsty
After doing a fair amount of research on the topic, it seems that a nice frsh packet of dried yeast, comes with enough inbuilt resources to allow the yeast to reproduce 3-4 times and still have enough internal juice left to finish the job of fermentation and shut down properly cleaning up after themselves as they go.
So the upshot is - a nice fresh pack of yeast with the majority of its contents alive and viable - should have enough yeast cells and internal resources so that they would be able to be pitched into an oxygenated wort at around 11 -13 plato - and not need any added oxygen.
So, according to the manufacturer's spiel - for quite a chunk of homebrew requirements, you shouldn't need to aerate.
I take it with the same level of "oh really" as I apply to the notion that Wyeast smack packs and Whitelabs vials, contain enough cells to pitch without a starter. Yeah - they do, if the pack is fresh, has been well looked after and your wort is no stronger than average. The dry packs, under the same sort of optimum conditions might not need the wort to be aerated.
Me - I aerate anyway. I don't know enough about the history of the yeast to assume its in optimum shape, so I assume it isn't. Besides, I dont want my yeast to have enough resources to do the job - I want them to have resources to throw away before they knock off. I want the best, least stressed yeast I can get; and to work them just hard enough to get some flavour out of their sweat - but no more than that.
Aerating isn't going to hurt your beer, not aerating just might - I know which horse I am backing
Thirsty