Or cooled boiled water if it will be some time before use.speedie wrote:It is a better practice to leave the yeast covered with brew!
Mick.
Or cooled boiled water if it will be some time before use.speedie wrote:It is a better practice to leave the yeast covered with brew!
At the time I did think I was about to pitch it, but I checked a couple of pitching rate calculators and it didn't quite look like enough (sorry speedie, just couldn't bring myself to chance it), so I fed it another 2L of weak wort. It was sitting in the fridge covered with nothing but cling film while I made and chilled the wort - will try not to do that again! I chilled it again after 2 days (on Mon night) and siphoned off most of the beer and pitched it Tue morning (today). It's fermenting quite vigorously at 18c right now and looking and smelling normal, so I'm pretty happy.billybushcook wrote:Or cooled boiled water if it will be some time before use.speedie wrote:It is a better practice to leave the yeast covered with brew!
Mick.
There is the opportunity for any starter to become infected if not handled correctly. What a stupid argument. Just goes to show how you'll clutch at straws to undermine anything that is different to how you do it.speedie wrote:Driving along yesterday thinking about boiled chilled water on your yeast bed and thought that there could be a slight possibility of an infection from the water if not handled correctly as opposed to clean unaffected old brew on the yeast?