As Wolfy says, you don't need a lot to start with, then you let this yeast grow/multiply in a starter bottle.
You boil dried malt extract in water to create the wort to let the yeast grow in.
Boil 100 gr of Dried Malt Extract in 1 litre of water for 15 min in a glass bottle of some sort with some alu foil over the top of the bottle.
Spray the outside with sanitiser and let it cool down.
When at room temperature, you want your yeast to grow into this wort, but probably not start with the whole litre. So you need another bottle, say a 1.5 litre soda bottle (sanitised) with half a dl of the sanitised, cooled wort. Tip the yeast from the Coopes stubbies in the bottle with the fresh wort and shake the shit out of it. Now you shake it as often as possible and add sanitised wort whenever you have time. Over 1.5-2 days you want to step up to the whole litre. This allows the yeast to grow nice and steady, and the shaking add oxygen which will allow them to grow better, but make the beer in the bottle smell sour.
When you are ready to brew, you simply leave the bottle of starter on the kitchen bench for several hours. When ready to pitch the yeast you pour off most of the "beer" and keep the yeast slurry in the bottom of the bottle, give it another good shake and pitch this in your fermenter.
If you want to get fancy, you build your own magnetic stirrer from old computer parts, this creates literally 10-15 times the amount of yeast cells..
stir plate:
http://www.stirstarters.com/instructions.html
If you want to read more about what really goes on and why you should be making starters, this is a loong but very educational read:
http://www.maltosefalcons.com/tech/yeast-p...s-and-practices
thanks
Bjorn