I note John Palmer's observation in 'How to Brew' after identifying the known downsides of under pitching, his doubts that over pitching is an issue of substance. Any modern home brewer following his guidance would therefore be inclined to go big to be safe.
I also note that some of the base calculations seem to have started off as broad, historic 'rules of thumb' using very round numbers, which then found their way onto spreadsheets and got scaled to give a precision that was possibly never demanded.
These two elements seem able (just about..) to cover the wide spread of starter/wort ratios I've noticed.
What remains a little trickier is understanding the discrepancy when it comes to starter yeast volume growth, which is sometimes very large when culturing up from petri dishes, bottle dregs or slopes.
Does it make sense to interpret this as demanding a two stage process, whereby the first stage is an aggressive high build phase, and the second a gentler conditioning phase?
- Or am I getting this completely wrong!