Lyrebird_Cycles
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 10/7/16
- Messages
- 1,438
- Reaction score
- 777
You want as much oxygen in your wort as possible at the moment you pitch the yeast
Sorry to be the naysayer but this isn't true.
Firstly, you want enough oxygen for the yeast to be able to make enough ergosterol and fatty acids to survive the alcohol they will generate, generally around 10 - 15 mg/l O2. You don't want more than that, it just invites problems including premature staling. For reference "as much oxygen as possible" is around 40 mg/l under normal conditions.
Secondly, it's obviously better to add the oxygen to the yeast rather than to the wort, so ideally you want oxygen level at pitch to be zero and to add the oxygen after pitching.
I am aware that commercial breweries often add oxygen before pitching but that doesn't make it ideal: in fact it's due to operational considerations including solubility. Adding the O2 in line from castout to fermenter vastly increases the amount that goes into solution, a commercial operation won't accept the 90% loss that's common with home brew setups.
Last edited: