DJ_L3ThAL
Such rapp, very bass
- Joined
- 11/5/10
- Messages
- 3,203
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Hey guys/gals,
For the last year I've been blindly building my starters ~100 billion cells larger than my required pitch amount and storing that 100 billion cells for re-use. I think it may have been carniebrew who I stole that tip from (sorry can't find the original post).
It has been working great so far with no noticeable ill effect to me (my current WLP001 is on it's 3rd generation), but I was thinking about it and wondering if I was subtly putting some sort of bias/pressure on the yeast? The yeast I am re-using is only grown in a starter environment, which for me is room temperature (fluctuates 15-20C at the moment for example). From my basic yeast knowledge the yeast is still going through the growth phase fully and then settling out in the fridge back to dormant stage before harvesting (I try to allow the extra 12 hours for them to build glycogen reserves up).
So my question is, is there anything I am overlooking or anything I may be causing the yeast to do more or less of through the generations of being grown in just a starter environment? If not, this really is a convenient way for me and no faffing about rinsing slurry! :beer:
For the last year I've been blindly building my starters ~100 billion cells larger than my required pitch amount and storing that 100 billion cells for re-use. I think it may have been carniebrew who I stole that tip from (sorry can't find the original post).
It has been working great so far with no noticeable ill effect to me (my current WLP001 is on it's 3rd generation), but I was thinking about it and wondering if I was subtly putting some sort of bias/pressure on the yeast? The yeast I am re-using is only grown in a starter environment, which for me is room temperature (fluctuates 15-20C at the moment for example). From my basic yeast knowledge the yeast is still going through the growth phase fully and then settling out in the fridge back to dormant stage before harvesting (I try to allow the extra 12 hours for them to build glycogen reserves up).
So my question is, is there anything I am overlooking or anything I may be causing the yeast to do more or less of through the generations of being grown in just a starter environment? If not, this really is a convenient way for me and no faffing about rinsing slurry! :beer: