OK, so I don’t think I quite got the discussion on “freezing†yeast I was looking for on Sunday. So for my first post, here I go!
I got this kit where you mix yeast slurry with glycerol (I think. It came with the Kit) and then put it in the freezer for storage. On the show the Whites said that you need to go much colder than a normal freezer to safely freeze yeast.
By adding the glycerol solution the water doesn’t freeze so the yeast walls won’t rupture. If the solution stays liquid in the freezer than I am not really freezing the yeast am I?
What I’m thinking is that the yeast stores longer at colder temp. So if I can bring them down past 32f (the lower the better) and hold them there (frost free freezer) without a thaw cycle, than they should have a longer storage life right?
The Whites mentioned something along the lines on a ten percent die off every thaw period, so as long as it doesn’t thaw I should be able to have enough viability to grow up a starter from the test tube right?
I want to be able to store yeast for a long time w/o having to re-culture and risk contamination each time.



