I recently started a Slanting thread as that's what I was intending to do, and got some great advice. However during the course of things, the alternative - freezing tubes of yeast - was presented so I had a good think about it and:
I have an old school freezer that needs de-icing every couple of months so the yeast tubes can be in deep freeze with no interruption as can happen with modern no frost cycling freezers. I acquired some kit and a bottle of glycerine (to prevent cell walls bursting which is the major no no in yeast freezing). I'll certainly revisit slanting if I get bad results down the track. Also please note I don't have a pressure cooker yet: relying on steaming only.
So here goes:
8 test tubes (30ml) to be prepared for freezing. I'm following the method provided by this site:
Into the stockpot:
8 test tubes and caps sitting in a Pyrex bowl,
a few assorted new syringes from the chemist sitting in a couple of Pyrex 250 ml teacups.
We are looking to get a cup containing 120ml of 70% water / 30% glycerine, and a cup of 120ml yeast slurry to fill 8 tubes.
Steam for an hour.
Arrange a work area away from any spores and yeast as might lurk in your brewery. Using a small graduated syringe, put 85 ml of boiled kettle water and 35 ml glycerine into one of the glass cups or your equivalent bit of kit, and microwave to a boil. The into each test tube, syringe 15 ml of solution, cap the tubes and cool rapidly.
Obtain a cup of slurry / yeast from a starter / topcrop from Yorkshire yeast etc etc.
Into each test tube, syringe 15 ml of yeasty solution. Cap, label and freeze.
Apparently if you fridge them for 24 hours and then freeze them you get better viability.
I look forward to the results. BTW the yeast is Wyeast 1968 London ESB. B)
I have an old school freezer that needs de-icing every couple of months so the yeast tubes can be in deep freeze with no interruption as can happen with modern no frost cycling freezers. I acquired some kit and a bottle of glycerine (to prevent cell walls bursting which is the major no no in yeast freezing). I'll certainly revisit slanting if I get bad results down the track. Also please note I don't have a pressure cooker yet: relying on steaming only.
So here goes:
8 test tubes (30ml) to be prepared for freezing. I'm following the method provided by this site:
Into the stockpot:
8 test tubes and caps sitting in a Pyrex bowl,
a few assorted new syringes from the chemist sitting in a couple of Pyrex 250 ml teacups.
We are looking to get a cup containing 120ml of 70% water / 30% glycerine, and a cup of 120ml yeast slurry to fill 8 tubes.
Steam for an hour.
Arrange a work area away from any spores and yeast as might lurk in your brewery. Using a small graduated syringe, put 85 ml of boiled kettle water and 35 ml glycerine into one of the glass cups or your equivalent bit of kit, and microwave to a boil. The into each test tube, syringe 15 ml of solution, cap the tubes and cool rapidly.
Obtain a cup of slurry / yeast from a starter / topcrop from Yorkshire yeast etc etc.
Into each test tube, syringe 15 ml of yeasty solution. Cap, label and freeze.
Apparently if you fridge them for 24 hours and then freeze them you get better viability.
I look forward to the results. BTW the yeast is Wyeast 1968 London ESB. B)