Frozen Yeast/Slurry

General homebrew discussion, tips and help on kit and malt extract brewing, and talk about equipment. Queries on sourcing supplies and equipment should go in The Store.
Post Reply
Elbow
Posts: 45
Joined: Thursday Aug 14, 2008 11:46 am
Location: Moorabbin, Victoria

Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by Elbow »

I followed the mini mash recipe for Grain and Grape Pilsner from their website recently, nice drop! I used a Wyeast liquid, Danish 2042. I was intending to do another batch straight after and pour the fresh wort onto the yeast slurry/cake left from the last batch. However, I never got a chance and instead poured the slurry into sterilised plastic drinks containers and put them in the freezer. In all I got about 2 litres of slurry. There was probably lots of hops in there as well as I dry racked around 20g of Saaz as per the recipe (I didn't rack to secondary due to time constraints).

Can I defrost this and use again? If so, is it the same as making a yeast starter? I am intending to do another Pils.
Interests: Liverpool FC, Beer, Music, My Wife. Not neccarily in that order...:)
User avatar
warra48
Posts: 2084
Joined: Wednesday Apr 04, 2007 12:45 pm
Location: Brissy QLD

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by warra48 »

What you propose is usually fine.
I've never put the slurry into the freezer, so I don't know how much of the yeast will survive that treatment.
I think the prevailing wisdom id to store it in the fridge.
I guess if you use it to build a new starter, you'll know.
User avatar
billybushcook
Posts: 539
Joined: Friday Nov 09, 2007 10:10 am
Location: Hunter Valley

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by billybushcook »

warra48 wrote: I guess if you use it to build a new starter, you'll know.
+1
If you defrost it slowly (ambient temp) then build a starter with some sort of sugar, you will soon know if it is still a viable yeast, that is, if it comes to life in a reasonably short time with a bit of aeration,

Cheers, Mick.
Elbow
Posts: 45
Joined: Thursday Aug 14, 2008 11:46 am
Location: Moorabbin, Victoria

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by Elbow »

No worries,

It was actually split between two bottles, one a 1.5 ltr and the other 1/2 ltr. I might defrost (slowly :D ) the little one first and try making a starter from that.

Thanks for the advice guys.
Interests: Liverpool FC, Beer, Music, My Wife. Not neccarily in that order...:)
User avatar
Trough Lolly
Posts: 1647
Joined: Friday Feb 16, 2007 3:36 pm
Location: Southern Canberra
Contact:

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by Trough Lolly »

G'day Elbow,
Unless you plan on conducting some pretty advanced yeast management processes, I would not freeze your slurry, especially if you plan on making another Pils in the near future (ie, the next month or so). By now, you should have some clearish liquid above the settled slurry that you can decant and dispose of when you next use it A few hundred mls of the settled slurry is more than enough to kickstart the next batch of pils that you're after and that slurry in a clean environment will easily last for the next few weeks, in the fridge.

Freezing yeast is possible but you need to have the yeast in the right media to begin with, otherwise you will do a lot of damage to the yeast cell walls which will in turn result in undesirable flavour outcomes when you next use it. Just keep the slurry in a sealed bottle and it will remain viable in the fridge for at least the next few weeks, no probs. Keep an eye on the bottle - lager yeast is still quite possibly active in the fridge and you don't want to make a bottle bomb, do you? Just ease the cap every week or so, or when the bottle walls feel quite tight...I'm assuming you've used a PET bottle, not glass?

Cheers,
TL
Image Image
Elbow
Posts: 45
Joined: Thursday Aug 14, 2008 11:46 am
Location: Moorabbin, Victoria

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by Elbow »

Hi TL,

It's actually already frozen (PET), was going to defrost the smaller bottle today and make attempt my first yeast starter in preparation for another Pils in a couple of days. Once it's defrosted, should I dispose of the clear stuff on top?
Interests: Liverpool FC, Beer, Music, My Wife. Not neccarily in that order...:)
User avatar
drsmurto
Posts: 3300
Joined: Friday Nov 17, 2006 11:53 am
Location: Adelaide Hills

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by drsmurto »

If its frozen solid you have done some serious damage to your yeast. As TL mentioned, the cell walls would have been damaged so the number of viable yeast has been greatly reduced.

You should never freeze yeast in water, glycol is the preferred medium.

Pour off the beer, add some starter to it and see what happens but if it was my yeast, i would be ditching it. :cry:
Elbow
Posts: 45
Joined: Thursday Aug 14, 2008 11:46 am
Location: Moorabbin, Victoria

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by Elbow »

Bugger! :(

As mentioned before, I basically ran out of time as I was heading overseas for a month and was not sure whether the slurry would be ok in the fridge for that length of time.

Ah well, chalk this one off to inexperience.
Interests: Liverpool FC, Beer, Music, My Wife. Not neccarily in that order...:)
User avatar
drsmurto
Posts: 3300
Joined: Friday Nov 17, 2006 11:53 am
Location: Adelaide Hills

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by drsmurto »

Yeast slurry will be fine in the fridge for a month or 2.

Have a read of this thread - Linky

Cheers
DrSmurto
User avatar
Anna
Posts: 511
Joined: Monday Jun 15, 2009 2:48 pm
Location: Southwest Sydney NSW

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by Anna »

DrSmurto - I had a look at your instructions in the "Yeast Harvesting" sticky and thought I might give it a go, as I just hate washing all that lovely slurry down the drain. Question: How much of the harvested slurry do you need for a fresh brew? (K&K) I'm currently using SA-23. One of the posts above says 100 ml or so - is that really enough? Do you just pour the harvested slurry on the top of the new wort and mix in?
User avatar
drsmurto
Posts: 3300
Joined: Friday Nov 17, 2006 11:53 am
Location: Adelaide Hills

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by drsmurto »

Anna wrote:DrSmurto - I had a look at your instructions in the "Yeast Harvesting" sticky and thought I might give it a go, as I just hate washing all that lovely slurry down the drain. Question: How much of the harvested slurry do you need for a fresh brew? (K&K) I'm currently using SA-23. One of the posts above says 100 ml or so - is that really enough? Do you just pour the harvested slurry on the top of the new wort and mix in?
I would normally use ~1 cup of slurry in a new batch. Since this is a lager yeast i assume you are pitching the yeast into the wort once the temp is ~20C or below and allowing it to cool to the desired fermentation temp of 12C?

If the harvested slurry is fresh then yes, just mix it in with your new wort.

If the slurry has been in your fridge for more than a week i like to fire it up first to make sure its viable. Since it is a large amount of yeast you don't need to increase the number of yeast present, just get them active so i would add a 500mL starter.

Or alternatively, you could make up your new wort and pour ~500mL of it into a flask/jar containing your yeast slurry and let it sit for an hour. When you see signs of activity, pitch that into your fermenter.

You should also make sure that your wort is adequately aerated. A sanitised spoon (assuming you use the white plastic spoon that came with the kit) and a rapid mix to 'froth' up your wort and you're done! I would do this regardless of how fresh the yeast is.

Provided your sanitation regime is up to scratch you can repeat this process a few times.

Have fun
DrSmurto

p.s. once you get confident doing this you can move up to liquid yeasts.
User avatar
Anna
Posts: 511
Joined: Monday Jun 15, 2009 2:48 pm
Location: Southwest Sydney NSW

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by Anna »

drsmurto wrote: You should also make sure that your wort is adequately aerated. A sanitised spoon (assuming you use the white plastic spoon that came with the kit) and a rapid mix to 'froth' up your wort and you're done! I would do this regardless of how fresh the yeast is.
Thanks once again Doc! You are so very helpful. Do you mean 'froth up' the new wort before or after the yeast slurry is added? (Sorry to be so pedantic....)

PS: Are you really a doctor?
User avatar
drsmurto
Posts: 3300
Joined: Friday Nov 17, 2006 11:53 am
Location: Adelaide Hills

Re: Frozen Yeast/Slurry

Post by drsmurto »

Either way works fine Anna, i tend to aerate the wort before adding the yeast.

Cheers
DrSmurto

p.s. depends what you mean by real? :lol:
Post Reply