MyQul
Chairman of the Bored
I don't really understand this. So you've pitched your yeast, then you've harvested some yeasty wort, put it in a different container and allowed it to finish fermenting. As the yeast settles out you can then pitch this in another brew. How is this different from pitching trub from the bottom of the FV? You've simply made trub in a different vessel from the main FV - it's exactly the same stuff, just a mixture of live and dead yeast cells plus settled out sediment from the original wort. Or am I missing something?
With BIAB you usually chuck everything into the FV (well I do anyway) so bottom cropped yeast usually has a very large percentage of trub in it. With this method I noticed I got a lot less trub in with the yeast, although I did get some
When you bottom crop you put selective pressure on the cell. Your only ever harvesting the most flocculant ones so eventually you get yeast that doesn't attenuate very well. If I'm understanding things correctly, with this method your collecting all different types of cells as your collecting at the most vigous time of fermentation. So in theory you could harvest by this method, from brew to brew, indefinatley. A bit like top cropping - I think this is correct but I might ask some of the yeast nerds on home brew talk to see if it's true