Just as a side note to this
You mention smacking the pack and leaving at room temp, would it not be better to have at the same temp as fermentation, thus promoting the best yeast growth (for me this is achieved by leaving the smack pack in the same temp controlled fridge as primary fermentation is about to take place in) or am i just being a bit tooooooo picky and anal about yeast temps?
(FYI i am in Darwin, average "room temp" at the Barking Log Brewery location was 27 degress on the day)
NEVER pitch a Wyeast smack pack before it has swollen.
The whole idea behind the smack pack is that you have you your yeast in a sterile enviroment & you can check its viabillity before pitching, whether into a starter or direct into the wort. If it has not swollen, there is nothing happening, so there is no point in pitching & leaving yourself further in the dark. Leave your self plenty of time to get the pack ready, if it fires straight away, simply put back in the fridge until you are ready. If the pack doesn't swell & it's "in date", return to your supplier for a replacement.
Cheers Ross
I follow the instructions correctly - warm the yeast to room temperature and burst the nutrients pack for a few hours before pitching. The bag swells and then I pitch when the wort temp is around 23 degrees.
Eater, even with your temps you should get better growth at room temp than at fridge temps. If you are decanting and pitching mostly slurry then keeping it out should be ok. If you are pitching the lot then I think you are probably right to keep it in the fridge or you risk having noticeable levels of esters/phenols/fusels added to your beer. If you are growing the yeast at a different temp to your fermentation temp, you would want to equalise the temps of the wort and the starter before you pitch the yeast. Do you do this with ales/lagers/both?
The yeast dribbles etc realy get a hard time, everybody has their own method afterall its not cheap paying all that stinking postage for 1 wyeast pack.
My experience is..., yeast is hardy, too much fuss about stress n counts was a waste for me of resources. Sure sanitation is a must as well as ferment temps but the yeast itself I think, looks after itself. So much text book stuff confuses people.
I was a believer you didnt pitch old packs because of viability, thats a load of ****, i have pitched a 13 month old 1275 to a FES, no starter and lag time of 60 hours, attentuation was 73% and a cracker of a beer, not a once of, i have scoured the out of date bins at G &G HMMM..... every time I go there, . I was a believer you dont pitch warm yeast to cold wort, thats a load of ****, but thats a lager yeast and another story.
Underpitching,overpitching are great valid yeast debates thou <_<
Yeast is very hardy IMO.
If you gotta pitch without smacking? doesnt matter one iota.
edit, I`ll drag it out and post it later, recently BYO had an article re. underpitching and the results were very interesting.
My hyrdometer broke a couple of weeks back, and haven't gotten around to replacing it so no gravity reading. The wort is very sweet to the taste, so I know there's plenty of sugars in there. i did pitch 1 pack, and it did swell nicely. Just no action once it went into the well aerated wort, which is at a stable 22 degrees and sealed tight in the fermentor. Is it possible contamination could inhibit the yeast?? How long should I wait until I pitch more yeast?
Yeah I'm with BB on the growth issue. Firstly, optimum yeast growth occurs in the mid 20s (can't find a ref for this, I've read it in a heap of places though...take with a grain of salt). Second, the nutrient pack in WY has nothing to do with cell growth, it is there only so you know if it's active or not (ref).
As far as I am aware, the yeasty goodness is in the surrounding liquid and nutrient in the inner pack.my first[and only]fray into a smackpack was a wyeast1335,smacked it whacked it waited 8 hrs,thought it had swollen[instructions wernt real clear as to know if the inner pack has broken or how much it "swells"ie:blows up like a baloon or just pillows] opened the pack poured it into the brew only to find the inner pack also went in UNOPENED fished it out, opened and poured it in,brew came out fine,maybe I was lucky but sticking to cheaper dried yeast for now
I believe Ross is spot on leave it in the pack untill it swells.
Because the general consensus is that - especially for older smack-packs - that smacking it a 'few hours' before pitching it, is generally not enough time for it to be fully active.I still don't know why this point is being discussed here, its irrelevant to this thread! The original post specifically stated that the pack did swell before it was pitched!
I still don't know why this point is being discussed here, its irrelevant to this thread! The original post specifically stated that the pack did swell before it was pitched!
Thanks TD,
So what do I do gentlemen? From the replies here, I obviously smacked the pack too soon, but it did swell and I pitched at correct temp, and the temp is still good but no action in the fermenter after 3 days. Do I re-pitch another yeast or wait??
Yep, zero visable/measureable activity for 30 days - not that I'd recommend it B)
cheers Ross
The yeast dribbles etc realy get a hard time, everybody has their own method afterall its not cheap paying all that stinking postage for 1 wyeast pack.
My experience is..., yeast is hardy, too much fuss about stress n counts was a waste for me of resources. Sure sanitation is a must as well as ferment temps but the yeast itself I think, looks after itself. So much text book stuff confuses people.
I was a believer you didnt pitch old packs because of viability, thats a load of ****, i have pitched a 13 month old 1275 to a FES, no starter and lag time of 60 hours, attentuation was 73% and a cracker of a beer, not a once of, i have scoured the out of date bins at G &G HMMM..... every time I go there, . I was a believer you dont pitch warm yeast to cold wort, thats a load of ****, but thats a lager yeast and another story.
Underpitching,overpitching are great valid yeast debates thou <_<
Yeast is very hardy IMO.
If you gotta pitch without smacking? doesnt matter one iota.
edit, I`ll drag it out and post it later, recently BYO had an article re. underpitching and the results were very interesting.
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