Tue Apr 27, 2010 6:47 am
I've been following & checking for updates on your progress almost daily. I had to raise my glass when you finally got CO2. Due to my location, collecting the wild Brett is way too simple so I was curious on how it translated for others. So for all of that, thanks!
So far, everything you're doing sounds good. You're at a mini crossroad, however. Pitching into another 1040 is the way to go, but depending on the amount of yeast you've propagated, you have some choices to make. Not a lot of yeast & no sour taste/smell, I'd swirl up everything in the starter & pitch that into your next step. If you have bacteria competing with the yeast in there (giving off that sour taste/smell), I'd add absorbic acid to drop the pH just below 3 to kill some of it off. If you go that step, you'll want to step it up a couple times before you try another acid wash.
Now, if you've built up a significant portion of yeast, I would take this step to rinse it - toss a clean glass jar in a pot of water & bring it to a boil. After it's boiled for a few minutes (10ish) remove the jar from the water with some tongs, keeping a bunch of the water in the jar. Immediately cap with foil & put it in the fridge to cool to 60-70*F. Decant your starter and mix the yeast 50/50 with the chilled, pre-boiled water, and swirl it up. Leave at room temp for another few minutes (10-20ish) for the garbage to settle out - you want the top liquid to settle to the consistency & opaque-ness of skim milk. Pour that into another container, leaving the bottom layer behind, for your next propagating step with some 1040 wort.
#1 - You want clean yeast, not numbers - take care of the bacteria/wild bugs before you step it up too many times. Otherwise the bacteria will have a clean shot at out performing the yeast, destroying all your work so far.
#2 - After your sample is clean, then build away. Always use a 1030-1040 wort to step it up and because this is a wild yeast with wild bugs, I like to add a few hop pellets for their antimicrobial properties - my last couple have had 4-5 pellets of a 6.4% Cascade into 1 gallon of starter wort. The only time you'd use a bigger gravity in your starter is if you're building a starter for a HUGE beer, and even then I'd play on the reserved side - maybe a 1055 wort to prepare the yeast for my 1110 barleywine.
Keep those updates coming brotha, good luck with this next step.
Lee
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