DaveGillespie said:
"Washing" and re-using the yeast seems to be the way to go rather than splitting between multiple brews.
As I have mentioned before, "rinsing" yeast with boiled water does more harm than good (proper yeast washing is an entirely different process). No professional brewer worth his/her salt rinses cropped yeast with boiled water. Yeast rinsing is a home brewer practice that is supported more by myth than science.
All one needs to do to harvest (a.k.a. "crop") pitching yeast from the bottom of a fermentation vessel is to leave enough green beer behind while racking to be able to swirl the solids back into suspension. The break material, hops, and dead yeast cells will quickly drop out of suspension, leaving mostly clean viable yeast in the liquid fraction. The liquid fraction should be decanted into sanitized container and stored in one's refrigerator. On brew day, the clear liquid fraction from the crop is decanted and replaced with fresh cool wort from one's batch before swirling the solids back into suspension. Yeast harvested and maintained this way can be repitched several times.
With that said, using a true top-cropping strain and cropping from the top at high krausen will result in a culture that can be repitched indefinitely. One should skim and discard the first head before taking one's crop, as the first head contains break material that is scrubbed from the wort by the yeast. The first head will also contain under-attenuating yeast cells.