HOW TO COLLECT YEAST TO USE AGAIN

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024

Комментарии • 236

  • @drumminsonlive9199
    @drumminsonlive9199 8 месяцев назад

    I saw your newest videos and I’m glad that you’re back and more glad that you aren’t dead we need good people like you to stay with us and lead the way…Thanks

  • @thomasgargano8813
    @thomasgargano8813 4 года назад +2

    What a man!!! BEST teacher I have ever seen on U-Tube👏👏👏👏👏May I call you George, I learned so much from your video,I can’t tank you enough for the lesson on how to make alcohol. With your encouragement ,I made my first gallon of wine. Now Iam off to make other type of wine and Spirit. Again thank you very much George.👏👏👏👏👏👏👏🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺

  • @sammyrussell936
    @sammyrussell936 4 года назад +2

    George I really enjoy your videos. I've gathered so much valuable information from you that has helped me alot. Thank You. And Keep the videos coming. Cheers

  • @kavehirani8788
    @kavehirani8788 4 года назад +1

    Such an intelligent customization of hose

  • @jeffroderick5783
    @jeffroderick5783 3 года назад +1

    Was wondering about this....Thanks for clearing that up 4 me GEORGE...

  • @timyates807
    @timyates807 4 года назад +17

    None of this is possible without you George , your kindness and willingness to help people is humbling . It's amazing and it's impossible without ya . So thanks again for creating this RUclips channel and sharing your vast knowledge for free ! Your great personality makes it pure fun while learning great amounts of knowledge. I love it . Thanks and take care

  • @jasongrezek3944
    @jasongrezek3944 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks George. I will have to try that sometime.

  • @jamesjennings9438
    @jamesjennings9438 5 лет назад +1

    This is great George! I have attempted to re-use my yeast in the past with very little success. I am thrilled to try again using your technique.

    • @BarleyandHopsBrewing
      @BarleyandHopsBrewing  5 лет назад +2

      Next we are going to make a yeast collecting chamber. Stay tuned for that one soon.

    • @jamesjennings9438
      @jamesjennings9438 5 лет назад +1

      @@BarleyandHopsBrewing Awesome! I look forward to it!

  • @chrisolivier9776
    @chrisolivier9776 4 года назад +9

    Thank you George. In South Africa it is currently difficult to get brewers yeast, therefore it is very important to reuse the bit one can get 👍👍

    • @Sunny-jz3dy
      @Sunny-jz3dy 2 года назад

      Thats why I wanted to learn how to collect my own yeast too! What if it becomes impossible to get it or something. I would rather be self sufficient and know how to make my own yeast..or collect my own yeast. lol

  • @1FrenchConnection1
    @1FrenchConnection1 4 года назад +8

    This is going to be very handy yeast will be hard to find in the near future. I would like to know how much do you pitch again for your next frugal fermentation.

  • @oldgoat8861
    @oldgoat8861 4 года назад +7

    This guy talks to the camera like a teacher talks to her pupils. For "Old Fast Newbe's" like me...its perfect education. Learning but not being overwhelmed with info, simplistic to understand, interactive so I don't fall asleep in class. Excellent !!!

    • @mattpeacock5208
      @mattpeacock5208 4 года назад +1

      Agreed, this guy is an excellent teacher.

  • @user-mr9tw6dj6h
    @user-mr9tw6dj6h 3 года назад +2

    hi george. i have watched alot of your videos and this is one i have question. if you harvest those yeast, how do you know how much of those harvested yeast to put into your next batch of beer? say you pitched 11.6g from the packet (1st generation) and i follow your wash and harvesting steps. how much of those harvested yeast i pitch in, assuming I am making the same second batch?

  • @joetookmyvideo
    @joetookmyvideo 3 года назад +1

    My friend, the pink shirt make's you look like Fabio, you are too talented for youtube

  • @paulsons4287
    @paulsons4287 5 лет назад +4

    george thank you for your service . i would love to visit and set and talk , you are my best information . thank you so much.

  • @aarontavcar4579
    @aarontavcar4579 5 лет назад +4

    Hi George, love your videos and the way you explain and demonstrate everything..there alot of guys on RUclips that do these videos and no one can pull it off like you do.....really cant wait for the all grain mash video.. cheers

  • @scotmcpherson
    @scotmcpherson 5 лет назад +6

    A racking cane makes handling the siphon hose much easier to manage.

  • @wege85
    @wege85 4 года назад

    For me easiest way to collect yeast is when I shift fermented beer to another container, it leaves behind almost all the bad yeast and hops behind and with the 2nd container you get more pure yeast. Then u collect it and rinse one time before use.

  • @anthonybarra2391
    @anthonybarra2391 5 лет назад +3

    Very interesting thanks, even though I'll probably not do it, still learn so much from watching, great video as always, thank you George

  • @joeogden7361
    @joeogden7361 Год назад +1

    Another nice job George. I just paid 14$ for a pack of Mexican Lager Yeast that worked beautiful. Thanks for info, will be washing for next batch. From Maine... thank you.

  • @DUST315
    @DUST315 4 года назад +1

    Can you please make a video on how to make yeast at home for whiskey, rum, vodka ?

  • @BeardedBored
    @BeardedBored 5 лет назад +2

    Awesome video! Been wanting to try this:-)

  • @justinmccameron263
    @justinmccameron263 4 года назад +1

    Can you collect yeast from a sugar wash in the same manner?

    • @chuckdontknowdoya6100
      @chuckdontknowdoya6100 4 года назад +1

      Yes it's easy with a sugar wash because there's a lot less other gunk

  • @paulsons4287
    @paulsons4287 5 лет назад +2

    Mr. just wondering how you got started in this and how you became the wonderful instructor that you are. how about a video on your how i got started. im doing my best here in mo. to get the best of those that will , into brewing, sad thing is i dont drink it. lol ill taste but not a drinker . love brewing . my grandma lived through the depression selling shine, and she would not allow no drinking . lol my granny ran a still up until the 1969 and was great at it . from what i know about it she went to the side of corn but she never cooked it ,soaked it for days then she would taste it,[it stunk] and she would add molasses , we made sorghum cane molasses every year, barrels of it. she cooked 100s of gallons and it went in the cellar. they would sell it as needed. lol

  • @jamesbest2983
    @jamesbest2983 3 года назад

    Just curious- when you were racking the water off the top- why did you not rack the yeast off the sludge into a clean jar and then rinse your syphon hose out?

  • @davidvincent2838
    @davidvincent2838 5 лет назад +2

    As a beer brewer ... you just had me at cold crashing........... SOOOOO many debates about this subject.........I digress. Continue George please.....

  • @yonceydelatorre3802
    @yonceydelatorre3802 4 года назад +1

    What is the downfall of distilling without using any type of turbo clear?

  • @glenna3434
    @glenna3434 3 года назад +1

    "junk on the bottom" is a very technical term 😊

    • @lilymcalister1825
      @lilymcalister1825 3 года назад

      Yeah, lol, one 9f my faves!! Made me chuckle a little.😉

  • @problemwithauthority
    @problemwithauthority 5 лет назад +2

    George I like your method of explaining details. No fluff, just enough theory, and right to the point. It is very reminiscent of my USAF tech school instructors. (without the war stories) A long time ago I heard of someone finding beer in a shipwreck and they were trying to reproduce the yeast. Don't know if they were successful but I can only imagine this is the separation process they used.

  • @johnr4898
    @johnr4898 5 лет назад +2

    Another mystery solved. Thanks to Bobby for the question and many thanks to you for answering it.

  • @oldcrowwoodcraft
    @oldcrowwoodcraft 4 года назад +3

    George, I realize this comment comes very late after you posted the video. I was wondering if it would be possible to dry the finished yeast in a dehydrator, obviously while watching the temp so you don't kill it. Or, if there's some other way to dry it so it will store easier?

    • @chuckdontknowdoya6100
      @chuckdontknowdoya6100 4 года назад

      Just put the finished jar in the refrigerator it will last for months.

    • @rgrant6309
      @rgrant6309 4 года назад

      Yes you can dry it. Spread it out on wax paper or plastic wrap let it dry and put it in storage. We have done the same for my wife's sourdough starter.

  • @davidvincent2838
    @davidvincent2838 5 лет назад +3

    I Australia, that stuff on the top we call "legs"..... the expressions across the globe amaze me

    • @madaxe79
      @madaxe79 4 года назад

      David Vincent no. we don’t

  • @chuckdontknowdoya6100
    @chuckdontknowdoya6100 5 лет назад +29

    I have yeast brought to this country from Italy by my great grandparents that my family has saved and used for four generations George works well with any red grapes or fruit say the word and I'll send you some when it cools off and makes it easy to ship as my way to say thanks for your great videos.

    • @TravisQuiring
      @TravisQuiring 4 года назад +1

      Can you please tell me how to continue to grow the yeast colony once collected.

    • @chuckdontknowdoya6100
      @chuckdontknowdoya6100 4 года назад +1

      @@TravisQuiring first l clean it a few times then I store it in a mason jar in the refrigerator until I need it again and I always add O2 to my water with a oxygen condenser before I add it to my mash to build a good colony and remember you alway have more yeast at the finish of your mash than at the beginning as long as you feed it and keep your ph close as you can to 5.2 your yeast will remain fat and sassy.

    • @TravisQuiring
      @TravisQuiring 4 года назад

      @@chuckdontknowdoya6100 what do you feed the yeast to keep it continually growing? In my mind I'm picturing a yeast starter continually growing and only using a part per batch then regrowing the colony for the next batches. Is this correct?

    • @chuckdontknowdoya6100
      @chuckdontknowdoya6100 4 года назад +2

      @@TravisQuiring I boil bread yeast to kill it then feed it to my good yeast along with a couple of muti vitamins and a couple of teaspoons of Epson salt and you're right you regrow the colony with each batch so you always have more then when you started especially when you give them plenty of O2 at the start.

    • @chuckdontknowdoya6100
      @chuckdontknowdoya6100 4 года назад

      @@TravisQuiring once you collect it just keep it in the refrigerator until you need it again and it will go dormant until it warms up again.

  • @justinsgarage1125
    @justinsgarage1125 2 года назад

    Just a deep though….Curious if you could cultivate yeast over several generations to be more and more tolerable to high alcohol levels making 20% ABV and higher easier and more probable of a dry fermentation.

  • @cheekysaver
    @cheekysaver 5 лет назад +1

    Some companies charge a fair bit for beer yeasty beasties. I just paid $6 for a package of yeast that is a good name brand at the grocery store. Right now...I just started brewing ales.. IPA is next... then I am going to do one more kit as a dark ale hopped right out. I heard that the kit yeast is not as good as this name brand yeast that will not be mentioned. The extract is $15.99 on sale from $18.99 (canadian) then there is the "enhancer" for about $10 (they can bite me on the primers carbonation things... I have sugars) My hops I got 1 to 2 years old from a good supplier that guarantee's them and stores them well and proper for $3 to $7.50lb... you better believe my tightwad self was interested in how to have a way to save my $6 a package yeast for the next batch. I really don't drink much... or often but I am passionate about teaching people how to live better on less... and I have ALWAYS wanted to try home brewing... I have 2 wines clearing that I used 2 different cheapskate methods to make... one a kit... one from grapes... I also have 2 different meads on the go and 2 more to start. I can get my wine and mead yeast cheap... I don't need to save that... but beer yeast means I can keep costs to around $30 with caps from here on out... for around 50 give or take beers... that is all kinds of awesome sauce. Vids like this are crazy important because I have to face the reality that people who I teach to be thrifty in my local facebook group are spending big bucks on hooch. Last time I bought a case of beer.. a 12 pack in bottles... $28.99 and they have a very different idea of what a craft beer should taste like. I found that just offensive and that was the straw that broke the camel's back... my home brewing journey began. MAN... am I going to have nice Christmas presents this year! I am hunting down every money saving tip I can everyday. A few minutes of watching this vid saved me $6. If I get enough yeast starter to make 2 batches... and do it one more time and get 2 more batches out each of those... then I will be happy to go spend the $6 to get more yeast. I do get that it is not yeast to infinity. LOL I have to price out doing some real brews from scratch. I would really appreciate any tips you have on that. I am kinda hop rich right now...but I would love to see a affordable way to crush 2 row. In the end... brewing in a bag will be more affordable for me. The kits are just my starting point.

  • @jeffreyallen3561
    @jeffreyallen3561 5 лет назад +2

    Sustainability is the word.

  • @RCSimRacin
    @RCSimRacin 4 года назад +2

    Lol you said Bobby and I snapped to attention real quick!

  • @jfk139
    @jfk139 5 лет назад +2

    George, how much of that liquefied yeast would you add to a 12 gallon mash??? Please/thank you!!!

  • @Sunny-jz3dy
    @Sunny-jz3dy 2 года назад

    I was told to stay away from clarification solution if I could. Because it takes away some of the flavor. Is that true? Also, how much of the yeast do you use for your next batch? I won't always make the same size batch....so I have no idea how much of the yeast to use.

  • @leslattery3913
    @leslattery3913 4 года назад +1

    Thanks George, New to your videos but have subscribed and watching the series. Yeast hard to find during this Covid BS so this video might be very very helpful.

  • @mattpeacock5208
    @mattpeacock5208 4 года назад

    How much does your culture multiply? Does it double or triple or what? And how much dies? I was under the impression that the end of the brewing process involved the death of the yeast from too much alcohol. Clearly I was wrong. Thanks for any info, and if I don't get an answer, that's cool too, I'll probably get the answer from watching more of these. Preciatcha!

    • @CharacterMatterz
      @CharacterMatterz 2 года назад

      They go dormant, I think, but don't die. When you add the clean water it dilutes the alcohol and they wake up. Then with oxygen they reproduce, so each time you do this you are making new fresh yeast. Theoretically you could make as much as you wanted in a starter culture. If I'm wrong someone will correct me next year...

  • @rldays9179
    @rldays9179 3 года назад

    Are you able to use that water that went down the sink? Would it have an ABV? I have been told you can reuse the water in your next wash would that be adviseable especially if it is just a sugar wash? I know with rum you have the Dunder and the backset in whiskey but those are grain and molassis. Could it be usefull with a corn or sugar wash? Or drinkable?

  • @TheStigma
    @TheStigma 2 года назад

    Maybe its not technically "worth" spending this much effort on it, but but having "infinite" yeast sounds perfect to my ears. You can use some of the money you save buying your "tried and true" staple to experiment with new ones so you can expand your repetoire and knowledge.
    You could speed up this process considerably with a centrifuge (basically artificially increasing gravity). Since yeast is somewhere around 3-5 micron size it should also be possible to mechanically filter it. This probably wouldnt be able to separate any of the solids from each other as you would probably catch most of them, but it would be a fast way to remove any water content (for easjer storing, or even further dehydrating?)
    I have some questions though:
    - Does the yeast survive fermenting dry? When it reaches its alcohol tolerance, does that kill it or just make it inactive? If it kills it then I guess you have to sample it before dry ferment?
    - How do we prevent contamination of other bacteria? Do they just get killed off by the alcohol in fermenting in each reuse because they arent bred to be as tolerant?
    - For long storage, do you need to periodically let them thaw up and feed them a little to keep the colony alive?
    - How do we deal with other contaminant bacteria

  • @j.angelo2528
    @j.angelo2528 5 лет назад +3

    To me it's "Junk on the Bottom". Well stated brother.

    • @bryanderian152
      @bryanderian152 5 лет назад +1

      interesting as allways.way to much time and effort.

  • @bigwalker5429
    @bigwalker5429 2 года назад

    I know this is an old video but I hope someone can answer but how long can you keep that yeast you reclaimed for in the fridge?

  • @lharchmage6908
    @lharchmage6908 5 лет назад +2

    I do this for my mead and cider yeast all the time. Good job!!

  • @ganni025
    @ganni025 2 года назад

    Hi, great video buddy....great tips you're giving, i have one question maybe anyone can help how long can you keep the yeast in that state in the fridge..TIA

  • @stillworksandbrewing
    @stillworksandbrewing 5 лет назад +1

    very interesting never seen it done. Thanks George

  • @weskus
    @weskus 3 года назад

    Thx George. I do understand this prosess. But once you are finish, do you dry the yeast like dry yeast one buy, ore used itsay wet.
    If wet, how do you measure it if one have to say put 6 gm in your next mix? Wet yeat yeast are heavier as dry yeast. Sorry if its a dumb Q..

  • @spikelove9533
    @spikelove9533 5 лет назад +4

    I know its fermented out and the yeast is dormant but it's good practice to put the lids on losely the first time in the fridge
    Also if you want to save a specific strain you should be super sterile the yeast can mutate and lose the flavors your chasing.
    I know you only have so much time and you weren't giving a brewing lesson lol. Juts thought it was worth mentioning.
    But for wash/mash any mutation most likely won't be noticed.
    The benifets is the yeast attach to the hulls of the dead yeast and form clusters, and the dead yeast add nutrients
    One last thought on saving a specific strain you should use ideal conditions to that strain so no stressing occurs.
    Thanks for the awesome vids you do I think alot of people will enjoy separating cleaning and reuseing.

    • @culturesgroup
      @culturesgroup 5 лет назад +2

      Great comment! How do you be super sterile so to prevent wild yeasts strains getting in?

    • @spikelove9533
      @spikelove9533 5 лет назад +2

      @@culturesgroup just using good brewing hygiene is about the best you can do. Boil jars and equipment use unscented bleach solution and starsands. But you are correct unless you have a clean room decon chamber and all the other lab stuff yeast is all around us, and some will get in. Minimizing is the about the best most of us will do. From my experience if I wanted to reuse a specific strain i was able to do so and get the same results as long as I tried to be a sterile as possible.
      I cant speak for all distillers but being sterile is pretty lax for brewing and transferring to the still for alot of us. By the time the shine reaches the jar sterile has been successfully accomplished lol
      I'm very far from an expert but I always suspected a more dominant strain of yeasts will overcome a weaker one 🤷‍♀️ I may be totally wrong it's simply an assumption. So I supose depending on how fast that occurs if it dose determines who much or how little any difference in taste might be and weather those flavors are passed to the whiskey.

    • @culturesgroup
      @culturesgroup 5 лет назад +1

      Thanks! Totally agree. Yeast demands you always do cold hygiene every time. Pretty sure that's why people buy new dried yeast every time if they can afford it. @@spikelove9533

  • @francoisjonker6085
    @francoisjonker6085 Год назад

    good afternoon ... does anybody know what happend to this channel .... were is george

  • @garywood8449
    @garywood8449 Год назад

    So much for the junk on the bottom. Rollin Rollin keep on Rollin down that river.

  • @julieoliver8170
    @julieoliver8170 2 года назад

    Does it taste change if you run it all with all the sediment when you run. Does the flavor change? I know at the end sometimes I can taste the sediment but during the run I never noticed a difference

  • @Iveram1993
    @Iveram1993 Год назад

    3 hours and 2 languages in i went to this video, and now I understand what to do. (I think) Now to try it once and figgure out where i failed!

  • @michaelmclaughlin9079
    @michaelmclaughlin9079 2 года назад

    Is there a benefit to cleaning the yeast when distilling? Whenever I have re used my yeast for beer I just toss it straight into the next batch. Never noticed any off flavors or anything. I never reused the same yeast more than once

  • @GreatWebSeries1
    @GreatWebSeries1 3 года назад

    Sir, I can get solid yeast powder from it. Just decan water ,dry it and store in clean polythene bag ?

  • @srinivasansrinivasan3144
    @srinivasansrinivasan3144 Год назад

    Sir very nice re used to the yeast infections in different places tempchirue please control of your Srinivasan Trichy Tamil Nada Indian

  • @ricebar6773
    @ricebar6773 5 лет назад +6

    11:52 "not economical" I just watched a video of you showing of a 6K still.

  • @DangerZONEpixel
    @DangerZONEpixel 2 года назад

    5:45 to go to the part of the video you all actually came here for.

  • @jameswilson1120
    @jameswilson1120 3 года назад

    Great job George but why do you clarify do you have to before you distill

  • @TheGlatch
    @TheGlatch 5 лет назад +1

    Hi George, why would you want to have your wash cleared?

    • @BarleyandHopsBrewing
      @BarleyandHopsBrewing  5 лет назад +2

      To make sure it doesn't scorch in the still. Cleaner in equals cleaner out.
      George

  • @newvocabulary
    @newvocabulary 2 года назад

    Pipette would probably work better to remove the yeast.

  • @rachelalder2182
    @rachelalder2182 2 года назад

    question ... if you want to repitch the yeast its in solution or cake... so how much do you use instead of dry yeast

  • @closertothetruth9209
    @closertothetruth9209 2 года назад

    i wonder if a pinch of Epsom salts clears a wash like it does with cloudy water.

  • @nvsmity8294
    @nvsmity8294 2 года назад

    Should I use all the harvested Beer to my next batch?

  • @hparson4729
    @hparson4729 Год назад

    over dose of yeast in baking may cause the cause of death!

  • @got2kittys
    @got2kittys 4 года назад +1

    We tied the syphon 2 inches or so, above the end of a nice sealed dowel. Or use a plastic pipe. Plop it in, and syphon end doesn't touch the bottom.
    A wine racking method.

    • @chuckdontknowdoya6100
      @chuckdontknowdoya6100 4 года назад +2

      I use a stainless steel rod the same way it's very easy to clean.

  • @tomkehl9632
    @tomkehl9632 5 лет назад +1

    George ! You started with a pack of yeast ! Under this process how much MORE Yeast do you get??

    • @BarleyandHopsBrewing
      @BarleyandHopsBrewing  5 лет назад +2

      Not sure. I haven't completed a count or weight but it is a lot.
      At least 20 times to starting amount.
      George

  • @carljenkins1229
    @carljenkins1229 3 года назад

    Is cold crashing beer essentially what lagering is?

  • @thsikezierkojo4991
    @thsikezierkojo4991 Год назад

    make a big yeast starter and divide/store much more cleaner less work

  • @jesuschristislordoflordsan427
    @jesuschristislordoflordsan427 3 года назад

    if it taste good, why dont you save it for drink? thanks for the share and cheers!

  • @buckhollywood5494
    @buckhollywood5494 5 лет назад +6

    Very informative videos you make, George. Thank You - I have watched many of them. Years ago when I used to make a very dark beer I would go to the beer store and look at the bottom of Guinness Beer bottles and make a six-pack out of the bottles that had the most "mother" in the bottom. The mother was collected and fed sugar, and we ended up with Guinness's own proprietary live yeast. (and we didn't let the beer go to waste ) I don't know if Guinness is still unpasteurized, but we exploited the yeast back in the day.

    • @Arouth249
      @Arouth249 4 года назад

      Its awesome that you can do something like this. Most people would’ve never thought about that!

  • @coopw101
    @coopw101 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome vid brother. thanks.

  • @blackntan150
    @blackntan150 2 года назад

    So I watched another video about this, and after the first wash from the bucket, in a few hours, the guy said you keep the lighter, cloudy, liquid on the top, and throw away the sediment at the bottom on the second... i'm confused. Seems like the sediment would actually include the dead yeast that falls out and the live yeast would be lighter? Or do I have this backwards? Live yeast on the bottom?

    • @lilinguhongo2621
      @lilinguhongo2621 2 года назад

      just stumbled across the same, Emmet over at Clawhammer Supply used the liquid, thinned and let it settle out again (3 times to be exact).
      In my opinion, the difference is in time and temperature. George here shows and refers to cold crushing, refrigerating the stuff for hours and scooping out the sediment, leaving the base layer of "bad stuff" in. Emmet sat his bucket for 45 minutes at room temperature only, so i assume the "bad stuff" settles first ("all" sediment at Clawhammer, "first layer" at Barley & Hops) and the yeast stays in suspension.
      A pity George's taking a big pause on YT (or quit at all?), would be great to hear his comparison.

  • @YaBoyBoogaLu
    @YaBoyBoogaLu 3 года назад

    Sheldon Cooper gone moonshiner

  • @wldtrky38
    @wldtrky38 5 лет назад +1

    Excellent !! Thanks George 👍

  • @gruglet
    @gruglet 5 лет назад +1

    George you are the Man :) I've learned so much from watching and listening to you. If your ever in Aussieland give me a yell and I'll buy you a beer or 7

  • @dustanburrell1571
    @dustanburrell1571 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome video love how well you explain everything and keep it interesting thanks for all you do

  • @tysonmillsom650
    @tysonmillsom650 3 года назад

    how do you know how much to add to next bacth

  • @LestonDr
    @LestonDr 4 года назад

    Bobby in TN and George Thank you much... rather than store it in the refrigerator. Could it be layed out in a dehydrator an be put back in its dry form or made into a cake and frozen? Thxs, Brad

  • @MrAc4mcac
    @MrAc4mcac 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks George, great lighting.

  • @vtbn53
    @vtbn53 4 года назад +1

    Old video I know, but if you do get this I would be interested in knowing how you know how much yeast you end up with, I know that theoretically you can end up with more than you started with, but my recipes call for a minimum amount of yeast (and experiment has shown it's important). I wonder if you could propagate even further?

    • @chuckdontknowdoya6100
      @chuckdontknowdoya6100 4 года назад

      In a five gallon batch it would be at least 20 times more and you can all measure it out by the teaspoon if you need to be precise or by the gram.

    • @vtbn53
      @vtbn53 4 года назад

      @@chuckdontknowdoya6100 but you would have to take into account the weight of the remaining water wouldn't you?

    • @chuckdontknowdoya6100
      @chuckdontknowdoya6100 4 года назад

      @@vtbn53 not the weight but the gallons I use two teaspoons per five gallons

    • @vtbn53
      @vtbn53 4 года назад

      @@chuckdontknowdoya6100 Yeah but in 95% of the world we use grams, I need to know the equivalent to the 280 grams of dry yeast.

    • @chuckdontknowdoya6100
      @chuckdontknowdoya6100 4 года назад

      @@vtbn53 3 grams per every 18.92 liters

  • @jimorth3023
    @jimorth3023 2 года назад

    great Info im going to do this George

  • @travisking4390
    @travisking4390 4 года назад

    I love your videos, and you obviously go above and beyond to draw them out and make it into something most would wanna watch. I have extreme adhd. I always try to fast forward to get to the point. Then i miss the whole concept. You should do some fast paced versions for those of us that can’t stand to sit and watch long drawn out versions lol. I would greatly appreciate it. Also no disrespect. I have been watching you videos for weeks now and love them. I just day dream when it’s drawn out and not straight to the point.

  • @adamwanderscheid8559
    @adamwanderscheid8559 4 года назад +1

    Thank you George!

  • @rw-xf4cb
    @rw-xf4cb 4 года назад

    Apparently in NZ people running low on Yeast to make bread during this pandemic; they're rushing out to use turbo yeast to make bread (admittedly 15% ABV bread lol)

  • @joshuathacker5521
    @joshuathacker5521 5 лет назад +1

    Just in time. Your videos are great. I got a pale ale going in a primary, racked it about an hour ago. I'll have it ready in the Keg for Canada day long weekend. I have always wanted to keep the yeast but haven't so far. I'll see if I can find some turbo clear looking forward to giving that a try. 🍻from Vancouver 🇨🇦

  • @jock5656
    @jock5656 4 года назад +4

    Thanks George, really need this during the current yeast crisis 👍🏻😊

  • @sandrogrima
    @sandrogrima 3 года назад

    question: why not make a yeast starter and save a small amount before pitching...then for the next brew, feed to reserved starter...similar to sourdough? Honest question, I want to learn

  • @jasonmyersOU812
    @jasonmyersOU812 Год назад

    That was awesome Buddy. I appreciate ya very much for showing me this technique. I'm going to be using it on the future for sure.

  • @michelewiltz5772
    @michelewiltz5772 3 года назад

    Hi George gr8 tips but just one question, Do I still have to add new yeast to this mix ? I have learned so much watching you thanks

  • @lilymcalister1825
    @lilymcalister1825 3 года назад

    WoW!! That's pretty kewl George!! I'm loving it!! Some yeasts are a little rare and hard to get your hands on. Its nice to know we can preserve yeast for using again down the road!! Thanks sooo much for another fantastic video and lots of great info!! Happy New Year George, from our family to yours!! Happy winemaking!! Or whatever you are ever making!!🥂 To 2021!! Cheers!!

  • @jessejames9155
    @jessejames9155 5 лет назад +1

    Very cool

  • @Edgunsuk
    @Edgunsuk 4 года назад

    Quick question on sugar wash,s do you have to clear them before distilling and if so does any clear , like turbo clear work on them ?

  • @donalddooley209
    @donalddooley209 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks george

  • @WorryfulStoner
    @WorryfulStoner 4 года назад +1

    7:20 "clean yee" 😂 sorry, reminded me of the yee meme, love your content though.☺️💕

  • @17hmr243
    @17hmr243 2 года назад

    bucket lid lifter to save your fingers - on flea-bay $9

  • @scipio2009
    @scipio2009 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks !!!!!

  • @msDanielp369
    @msDanielp369 3 года назад

    you can use some liquid of a fermenting thing to a new batch too.
    a compelling reason to collect is for transportation, and storage

  • @mustavertwang
    @mustavertwang 2 года назад

    George is King!

  • @andyharris3084
    @andyharris3084 4 года назад

    Why use Turbo Clear as opposed to the Keiselsol then Chitosan (aren't they the same?)