A question for those far more experienced in such things.
So I've two 1.75 litre starters merrily foaming and multiplying my diamond lager yeast. I plan to step this up to two 3 litre starters, the question is to decant or not:
Option
1: Do as the stepped starter instructions tend to say - chill, decant, top up with fresh wort - 90 - 100g DME per litre ie chill overnight, decant off the used supernatant and add fresh wort with about 300g DME in 3 litres each to reach about 3.25 litres (3 litres new wort + 0.25 litre of yeast)
OR
2: Why if I'm stepping up the volume do I need to bother with chill and decant? Instead avoid the risk of cell loss with cool and warm, dissolve the same amount of DME required in 1.5 litres of water and add that to reach the same final DME concentration and volume of 3.25 litres.
Option 2 seems faster, same sugars concentration and avoid the chill and decant in the middle? What am I missing here?
Anna
So I've two 1.75 litre starters merrily foaming and multiplying my diamond lager yeast. I plan to step this up to two 3 litre starters, the question is to decant or not:
Option
1: Do as the stepped starter instructions tend to say - chill, decant, top up with fresh wort - 90 - 100g DME per litre ie chill overnight, decant off the used supernatant and add fresh wort with about 300g DME in 3 litres each to reach about 3.25 litres (3 litres new wort + 0.25 litre of yeast)
OR
2: Why if I'm stepping up the volume do I need to bother with chill and decant? Instead avoid the risk of cell loss with cool and warm, dissolve the same amount of DME required in 1.5 litres of water and add that to reach the same final DME concentration and volume of 3.25 litres.
Option 2 seems faster, same sugars concentration and avoid the chill and decant in the middle? What am I missing here?
Anna