Just a quick question, I made a 2.5L yeast starter from two CPA stubbies with 250g of BE2.
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I was going to add it to my brew some time late Monday afternoon, but if you think I should wait, any advice would be welcome
If you just tipped the yeast from the stubbies into the full 2.5l starter, its quite possible that it will not be ready to go by today, you'd really want to make sure you have a noticeable amount of yeast before you pitch it.
What is generally a better practice, is to start with a much smaller starter and step it up in size until you reach your pitching volume, where the step sizes should be about 4-6 and no more than 10 times the previous volume.
I just cultured some Coopers yeast from a single longneck, using 1:10 LDME:Water:
Step 1: 40ml yeast slurry from bottle + 40ml in test tube
Step 2: 250ml
Step 3: 1l
Step 4: 2.5l (which I plan to split over 2 brews)
Each step took about 12-24h, and showed good signs of yeast growth and activity before the next step.
The 2.5l has nice layer of yeast at the bottom now that it's been cold-crashed in the fridge for a day or so.
The problem with using such a small amount of yeast in the full 2.5l (if that's what you did) is that it will probably take a long time before the yeast can reproduce enough to notice any activity and during that lag-time it opens up your starter to all sorts of infections. By starting small and stepping up, the ratio of yeast to culture is much higher, so there is better chance at growth and less chance of infection.