boobookittyfuk wrote:Yorg wrote:I don't want the DME starter in my AG.
then do a mash for your starter.
don't cold crash a starter...its counter-productive
if you cold crash then you WILL have a a much longer lag in fermentation then if you just pitched the entire starter. Not only that but by decanting off the top, you are tossing away the best yeast in the starter. If you were going to make a large starter, cold crash it, decant the top, you might as well just pitch 2 packages of yeast. Chances are you'd get a better fermentation for your dollar by just pitching more packages of yeast than to do the silly cold crashing that people do for some reason.
Yes yes yes! BBKF is right on this one. To put it another way, when the yeast sense their food supply dwindling and their byproducts accumulating in the wort, they start building up their glycogen reserves and prepare to go dormant until conditions in the environment improve. When you pitch these hibernating guys into fresh wort, they sense the right conditions for growth and wake up. They start taking up oxygen and building up their cell walls so they are strong enough to handle passing sugars and other stuff across the membrane, and so they can bud off daughter cells. Yeast need to pass through their normal phases to be healthy and perform correctly. Cold crashing at high krausen will stun most of your yeast and they will not recover. They are in the fermentation phase and are not prepared for the cold. Some will likely make it through, but the net effect will be an under pitched wort.
If you have a heavily oxidized starter, you will need to ferment to completion and decant. Otherwise, just recalculate your recipe to include the DME in the starter and pitch the full amount. Maybe 1/5 of your wort will be DME but I don't think you will notice any difference in taste. Many brewers, pro and amateur use DME to bring a wort up to target gravity. Also, to reiterate what BooBoo said, if you decant at high krausen without cold crashing, you will be tossing out all the healthiest yeast and actually selecting for poor performers that flocculate out early.