
hopshead wrote:I am thinking about doing this on my next few batches of beer. One question though. I use foam control in my better bottles. They are 6 gallon fermenters and I typically shoot for 5.5 gallons of beer in the fermenter, meaning I need foam control to prevent MASSIVE blowoff and lost beer. Will the foam control screw up the top cropping pseudo burton union method? Or, will I still get the top cropped yeast I need?

TastyMcD wrote:It depends.![]()
First of all I'm a 10 gallon brewer. (That means I pull the first pint from one of two completely full 5 gallon kegs. No short knock-outs for me.)
If I'm harvesting using my 18 inch sanitized mash stir spoon (versus the blow-off method), I'll usually take one spoonful at high krausen and put that into a 2000ml 1.035-1.040 starter wort and let it ferment out. I would use that starter as-is for brews under 1.060 and step it up to 4000ml for bigger beers or lagers. If I need the starter sooner or go right to 4000ml, I'll take three or four spoonfuls or use the blow-off method (to collect a bunch).
So the short answer is the more you harvest the less time it takes the starter to ferment.
Again, I don't want to steal too much yeast from the current batch because it needs to ferment out. I'm top cropping for the quality of the yeast, not to save money or a trip to the LHBS.
Try it and let us know if you see a difference in the ferment.
Tasty

You!TastyMcD wrote:At least two weeks. I've gone four but used it in a starter to "proof" it. I've never had a reason to go longer but I suspect that could be problematic without using the techniques employed by the yeast labs.
Tasty
Bah wrote:TastyMcD wrote:At least two weeks. I've gone four but used it in a starter to "proof" it. I've never had a reason to go longer but I suspect that could be problematic without using the techniques employed by the yeast labs.
Tasty
I might know a thing or two about this...
I'd say that if you put the yeast into a well cleaned Vial, with that vial sanitized very welll, maybe boiling and then iodine/star san or whatever method you'd consider the best you've got, then there wouldn't be any reason that you couldn't store that yeast in the fridge just as long as a fresh vial. Really the only difference would be that it would have been originally packaged under a laminar flow hood in a previously sterilized vial. So yeah...
I mean if you think about it what you've got in that re-sealed vial is a fresh grown yeast population and it would be fresher than anything your LHBS could get (at the fastest the LHBS would get the yeast after a week of QC testing and a few days of shipping).
I guess the only thing about that storage is that it may go from being this superman yeast version of itself, to the regular awesome but normal version it is. I mean either way though, In my experience that yeast stores for some time anyways, and starters are so important even with a fresh vial.
Hope that all means something,
Brad

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