Hogan
Stalag Brewery
- Joined
- 3/8/05
- Messages
- 772
- Reaction score
- 2
I have done some trials on harvesting yeast form the fermenter but have found that washing the yeast more than once provides only a minuscule amount to work with. I have found that at the end of cold conditioning my beer after primary fermentation there is about a half cup of sludge left on the bottom of the CC vessel (cube) which when left in the fridge for ten minutes produces what appears to be a good deal of yeast.
So that there is no confusion with the cold conditioning process actually being mistaken for secondary fermentation I have listed the steps taken to reach the half cup of sludge stage.
1. Primary fermentation carried through to final gravity.
2. Beer is racked off yeast cake into a cube. Cake, trub & heavy sludge are left behind.
3. Cube goes direct into cold conditioning at 0c.
4. After four days of CC, polyclar added.
5. Beer racked through filter into keg.
6. Sludge left in bottom is swirled and mixed with small amount of beer remaining in cube.
7. Sludge placed in jar in fridge and allowed to separate.
8. Large amount of what appears to be viable yeast drops to bottom of jar.
It is undisputed that the beer racked from the primary fermenter still contains viable yeast. When transferred to the cube that yeast will go to sleep due to the CCing but sufficient will still remain in suspension and later (if bottling) will travel through the filter to carbonate the beer.
It should be stressed that this process does not include a secondary fermentation stage. Lagers remain in primary for a full two weeks, ales less. Final gravity has been reached in primary and ccing will not allow any additional fermentation.
I think that the half cup of sludge left after ccing is mostly yeast and when harvested and awoken would produce a far greater quantity than what could be washed from the primary fermenter sludge.
I intend to make up a trial starter using this yeast and see what transpires.
What do those experienced with yeast harvesting think?
Cheers, Hoges.
So that there is no confusion with the cold conditioning process actually being mistaken for secondary fermentation I have listed the steps taken to reach the half cup of sludge stage.
1. Primary fermentation carried through to final gravity.
2. Beer is racked off yeast cake into a cube. Cake, trub & heavy sludge are left behind.
3. Cube goes direct into cold conditioning at 0c.
4. After four days of CC, polyclar added.
5. Beer racked through filter into keg.
6. Sludge left in bottom is swirled and mixed with small amount of beer remaining in cube.
7. Sludge placed in jar in fridge and allowed to separate.
8. Large amount of what appears to be viable yeast drops to bottom of jar.
It is undisputed that the beer racked from the primary fermenter still contains viable yeast. When transferred to the cube that yeast will go to sleep due to the CCing but sufficient will still remain in suspension and later (if bottling) will travel through the filter to carbonate the beer.
It should be stressed that this process does not include a secondary fermentation stage. Lagers remain in primary for a full two weeks, ales less. Final gravity has been reached in primary and ccing will not allow any additional fermentation.
I think that the half cup of sludge left after ccing is mostly yeast and when harvested and awoken would produce a far greater quantity than what could be washed from the primary fermenter sludge.
I intend to make up a trial starter using this yeast and see what transpires.
What do those experienced with yeast harvesting think?
Cheers, Hoges.