I've never heard of it being a bad idea, nor of dry yeasts being loaded with "nutrients and food" - there just isn't enough room in the packet, especially if 96%+ is yeast cells!
If you don't have two packets for a high S.G. beer at least a mini-starter is a good idea and I have done it a lot of times.
Not sure if I agree with all this. Although you don't need to make a starter from dry yeast, it won't be any less healthy than a starter made from liquid yeast. If it is a high gravity lager you are making and you only have one pack of 34/70, then I would rather make a large starter to get to the right pitching rate than underpitch dry yeast. This is what I did for my Dogma clone, and worked really well.
You're right, and it does. In the "Yeast" book by J Zainasheff and C White (of White Labs Yeast) it's stated that pitching dry yeast directly into wort can kill up to half of the cells.If all this mysterious bad stuff was going to happen to the dried yeast in a starter, it would occur when pitched into a full volume.
Quote directly from Lallemand: The media used is crucial to a successful rehydration. Undiluted wort causes osmotic pressure to the yeast and compromises its health. Most yeast strains can be rehydrated in water but lager yeasts benefit from rehydration with a small concentration of sugar, so diluted wort (3ð Plato) is preferred.Llalemande have a blog where their scientists answer questions like this and while it is long and perhaps overly in-depth, it does dispel such myths.
I wondered where the myth of half the cells dying from dry pitching came from and am not surprised it comes from someone who sells an overpriced "liquid" yeast product...
You should read a little more from Lallemand, not just pick out the bits that seem to support your beliefs.
I wondered where the myth of half the cells dying from dry pitching came from and am not surprised it comes from someone who sells an overpriced "liquid" yeast product...
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