I've collected the yeast cake from a recent brew (US-05) in a sterile 2 litre glass flagon with the intention of washing. I've performed this process before, watched all the videos and read up a lot. I've never seen this before. I'm on the tablet entering this so I'll add photos later.
Usually when you add sterilised water to the yeast cake and collect it you will fairly quickly see the layers forming with the dark trub settling to the bottom, the lighter creamy yeast above and clearer liquid (water and residual beer) on top. If you refrigerate this it will become very clear layers with distinct lines. This did not happen for my most recent collection.
Instead, as the solids began to drop out of solution, I had the dark layer sandwiched between lighter creamy layers above and below. Now, yesterday after refrigeration, I have the distinct layers of separation but they are upside down. The bottom layer is light and creamy, the middle layer is darker and mottled with the clear liquid on top.
Anyone seen this before? Is the bottom layer the trub or the yeast?
Usually when you add sterilised water to the yeast cake and collect it you will fairly quickly see the layers forming with the dark trub settling to the bottom, the lighter creamy yeast above and clearer liquid (water and residual beer) on top. If you refrigerate this it will become very clear layers with distinct lines. This did not happen for my most recent collection.
Instead, as the solids began to drop out of solution, I had the dark layer sandwiched between lighter creamy layers above and below. Now, yesterday after refrigeration, I have the distinct layers of separation but they are upside down. The bottom layer is light and creamy, the middle layer is darker and mottled with the clear liquid on top.
Anyone seen this before? Is the bottom layer the trub or the yeast?
Attachments
Last edited: