Want to place an ad email luke@realbeer.co.nz
$50+GST / month

RealBeer.co.nz

i am puting down only my second brew tonight, brewing an IPA (of course)

 

i've read in some places that you should wet the yeast in a glass of warm water before adding to the brew, instead of adding it dry tot he brew?

 

Does one way work better than the other?

 

Also would this then go the same for the finings too?

Views: 52

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

You usually find that we're split on the issue of rehydrate or sprinkle dry and both work perfectly well.

I do rehydrate and use this method, from http://www.fermentis.com/FO/pdf/Tips-Tricks.pdf

Yeasts are living organisms and rehydration temperature is critical for
good yeast performance. Fermentis recommends that top fermenting/ale
yeasts are rehydrated at a temperature between 25-29°C (77-84°F) and
that bottom fermenting/lager yeasts are rehydrated at a temperature
range between 21-25°C (69-77°F).

Rehydrate the dry yeast into yeast cream by sprinkling it in 10 times its
own weight of sterile water or wort. Gently stir and leave for 30 minutes.
Finally, pitch the resultant cream into the fermentation vessel.

That said, the straight sprinkle method is a shitload simpler and leaves fewer steps to f* it up or infect from !
I heard on Brew Strong that viability can be as low as 50% if you sprinkle, but I usually have done.
I've rehydrated ales for years, just kept going because it works for me, not to say that sprinkling wouldn't be as effective. I think you'll find most would reply 'sprinkle'

Recently sprinkled the 34/70 I bought - results seemingly no different to rehydrating or repitching slurry

I think there's some discussion out there on whether you oxegenate or stir too

RSS

© 2024   Created by nzbrewer.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service