The process I mentioned before is not my usual, it's what I'm changing to fix a problem.
When I started out, it was just like the old directions. No boiling sugars, no proofing yeast. Just kit, and kilo of sugar, boiled water to mix/dissolve, top up with tap water, sprinkle with kit dried yeast, stir in with sanitized spoon. This method failed for me, never trying it again, don't suggest it.
Then I though it was the sugar, so I switched first to dextrose sugar, then coopers BEs, then buying liquid or dry malts. Didn't fix the problem.
Then I started boiling all the above first, didn't help.
Then I thought it was water, so preboiled water too, didn't help.
Then I thought I was not cleaning properly, so I bought starsan.
Then I thought it may be scratches and whatnot that even starsan couldn't fix, so bought new fermenters.
Then I thought it was the stirring, so went back to just sprinkling the dry yeast on top - not rehydrating/culturing, not stirring or touching the yeast much at all. That didn't help so I thought buy better yeast. I know I tried so4 and so5 during winter months years ago, I think these brews worked out, so this is why I started this thread saying yeast problem maybe. Not sure if they're worth using now in hot weather where the lowest temp I can do is 26C though, so this thread is about working with coopers yeast.
This current method I posted earlier was just a new thing I'm trying, not what I've always done.
Anyway, back to the present.
I'm running all three fermenters I have right now, if running an a/c over the hot days may as well get more value for money...
Ones got coopers ginger beer so forget that for now
The other two have coopers lager.
Both were started 10hrs ago. One with the preboiled wort and precultured yeast, the other just has had boiled water and rehydrated yeast (has seen no dex or sugar prior to pitching).
The preboiled/cultured fermenter has gone bonkers, krausen up to the airlock (that's not really a good thing, messy to clean up afterwards etc I know), but never had a yeast start so strongly so that's a good sign at least (Edit: I hope. I hope it's not just going to burn out early on the dextrose and stall at the malt - anyway, we shall see if a quick start is better than a lslow and steady burn the other fermenter has). Not much foam in the other fermenter, just barely starting to bubble now while the other one started bubbling 6 hours ago.
We'll see if any stall, and what they come out like flavour-wise.