I haven't been happy with the lag times I've been getting with rehydrated dry yeast (typically 12+ hrs), so today I made a small starter and added the rehydrated dry yeast to it. I made the starter during the middle of the mash and it was very active when pitched. Despite pitching at 62F, the lag time to first seeing bubbles from the blow-off tubing was less than two hours.
Up to this point, I had only seen two schools of thought on dry yeast. One says to just pitch directly into wort, while the other says to rehydrate in warm water (sometimes with Go-Ferm) and then pitch. So far, at least, I would argue that making a small starter to get the yeast going before pitching is an effective alternate approach to reduce lag time.
I'll report back in a few weeks. Hopefully this approach improves other fermentation characteristics, since lag time doesn't always correlate with clean, complete fermentations.
Dry Yeast Starter
We make starters with dry yeast when we make bread to wake up our little friends. I don't see why there's any reason not to do the same when making beer.
I've read about osmotic pressure issues killing dry yeast cells being pitched into starter wort. I just can't believe the hype when millions of people rehydrate freeze dried yeast daily in tap water with sugar to make bread.
I've read about osmotic pressure issues killing dry yeast cells being pitched into starter wort. I just can't believe the hype when millions of people rehydrate freeze dried yeast daily in tap water with sugar to make bread.
Cedar Rapids Beer Nuts Secretary
"Milk does a body good my ass. Beer is the healthier choice and hops are a wonderful medicine."
MattF
"Milk does a body good my ass. Beer is the healthier choice and hops are a wonderful medicine."
MattF