Here's a thought experiment for all you so-called beer nerds.
One of my clubs is doing a group brew on Saturday 1/23, a 75 gallon imperial stout at the Captain Lawrence Brewing Company. Unfortunately, no one actually took the time to think out the yeast starter. We won't have access to the fermenter until we are ready to brew.
According to Mr. Malty we will neeed 5014 billion cells. This is .75x10^6/ml/deg. plato. Chris white says we only need 0.5x10^6/ml/deg. plato, which is still 3342 billion, which is still a ton. Either way there's a lot of yeast to grow up. Assuming we have no stirbars and only have carboys and buckets as fermenters, how can we grow this up the fastest, without buying 10+ yeast packs? The club wants this fairly centralized so only 3-4 people will make up the yeast so that inexperienced people aren't making these starters.
I've figured out this plan, using Mr Malty:
Have 3 seperate people
Step 1: 5liter / 1.25 gallon starter from 1 pack. Crash the yeast in the fridge (100 --> 300 billion cells). Time 3-4 days
Step 2: Pitch that yeast into 2.5 gallon starter. Crash the yeast in the fridge (300 --> 730 billion cells). Time, 3-4 days
Step 3: Pitch that yeast into a 5 gallon starter. Crash the yeast in the fridge. (730 --> ~1800) crash in the fridge. Time, 3-4 days.
Theoretically this could take 12 days, which is an absolute maximum. The only way I could think to make it faster is to skip step 1 and pitch 3 packs each into step 2. I also think this has a fair bit of risk of contamination. Can anyone think of a better way to do this up/




