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Slow start/no start Ringwood slant

Started by Chris Craig, April 17, 2012, 08:02:48 AM

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Chris Craig

This is really strange...

I made a starter of Ringwood from a slant using my stir plate.  That seemed to go well.  It was a 1L starter, and after 2 days, I stopped the stir plate, and there was a few mm thick yeast cake after crashing in the fridge for 2 days.

I brewed this weekend, and let the flask sit out at room temperature the whole time.  I pitched the Ringwood into 5g of well-aerated wort, and S-05 into another 5g, placed the fermenters in the fermentation chamber at 18C, and walked away.

That was Saturday.  On Sunday morning I had a nice krausen in the S-05, but nothing in the Ringwood.  This morning...nothing in the Ringwood.  I ended up pitching S-05 into the Ringwood this morning to try to salvage it.

Ideas?

Jake

I used ring wood 3 or 4 weeks ago and never had any activity for almost 3 days. Never have had such a slow start but fermented out nicely to about 1.013
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fakr

Chris, is a 1L slant starter enough for a 5GAL batch?  I would think you'd need to do a stepped starter to get the cell count up first.

I have a ringwood slant starter that I'm going to use in my next batch and considered the following:

slant into 1L for 3 days
decant, then add to new 2L starter for 3 days
decant and pitch into 6GAL of 1.050 or less.
"If God had intended for us to drink beer, He would have given us stomachs."

jeffsmith

With such a small culture to start, I'd almost be inclined to start at 250ml or 500ml before stepping up to 1 or 1.5L.

Chris Craig

Quote from: "fakr"Chris, is a 1L slant starter enough for a 5GAL batch?  I would think you'd need to do a stepped starter to get the cell count up first.

I have a ringwood slant starter that I'm going to use in my next batch and considered the following:

slant into 1L for 3 days
decant, then add to new 2L starter for 3 days
decant and pitch into 6GAL of 1.050 or less.

I'm thinking a 2L starter is overkill for a standard ale. I've done 1L starters many times before, and have had great results.

fakr

And you're talking 1L starters from slants?
"If God had intended for us to drink beer, He would have given us stomachs."

Chris Craig


fakr

mrmalty recommends 5 vials of yeast for a 1L starter to get an adequate yeast cell count for a 5GAL batch.  I try to follow their calculator pretty close if making a starter.

Maybe Thomas can comment on this, if he's around?
"If God had intended for us to drink beer, He would have given us stomachs."

Richard

AFAIK the vials it's talking about aren't the same as ours - they'd be the white labs vials, not streaked vials.
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jeffsmith

Quote from: "Richard"AFAIK the vials it's talking about aren't the same as ours - they'd be the white labs vials, not streaked vials.

Agreed, While Labs vials or Wyeast smack packs. I believe each contains ~100 billion cells. Significantly more than a cultured slant.

fakr

yeah, couldn't find "slant" on the mrmalty calculator but used the vials as an example.

The slants have a cell count in the millions...which is why I would do a stepped starter.

But Thomas would be the authority on this.

by the way...I wonder if a person could use weight measurement of a slury with  a set consistency to predict cell count....a rough prediction mind you...
"If God had intended for us to drink beer, He would have given us stomachs."