The point of reculturing is also that you can make one packet go further. You can also have yeast on hand all the time rather than running out. I have a few bottles of recultured 05 in my brew fridge. Just used some in a recent brown ale
I reculture from my slurry usually rather than the bottle though (especially if I use a liquid).
The advantage of reculturing a yeast from one of your own bottles is that you can drink the beer right there and then, and if the beer is sound then, all else being equal, you are OK to reculture. The author of Brew Your Own UK Real Ale, Graham Wheeler, "stores" all his yeasts this way. What you can do is to fill the last bottle using glass from the last runnings out of the vessel so it gets a thicker sediment, label it specially, and just store it with the rest of the batch until you need it. It should last almost indefinitely.
When I was averaging a brew a fortnight....
Hi all, im new here, been maily on the coopers forums so far.
Just wondering if someone could point me to a guide for yeast culturing from a bottle (ie. White Rabbit has been discussed) and also it sounds interesting/cheap to be able to make a yeast go longer then one brew, either getting a yeast and growing it and storing it in the fridge?
How long can yeast be stored in the fridge for?
Is there any rule of thumb as to how long a yeast can be in the bottle until you're unable to recondition? I've had a hoegaarden clone with a recultured yeast for about a year now (it worked really nicely, great beer), and was thinking of using it again for a nice summer quaffer. I've got enough left over bottles to use the sediment of 2-3, but would the yeast viability be particuarly low now that it's not only been recultured once, but also in the bottle for such a time?
Cheers and beers,
Mr.Moonshine
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