Harvesting 1999 Lancelot Biere Cervoise

Discussion in 'Homebrewing' started by ao125, Feb 11, 2013.

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  1. ao125

    ao125 Initiate (0) Dec 1, 2010 Virginia

  2. mountsnow1010

    mountsnow1010 Initiate (0) Jan 23, 2009 Vermont

    With a beer that old....I would want to harvest as many bottles worth of sediment as possible into a small starter. If you have access to a hemocytometer or a scientist buddy with one, you could always sample the dregs from one bottle to get an idea of whether you have any viable yeast or not.

    I am also curious to know what kind of yeast is in it.
     
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  3. ao125

    ao125 Initiate (0) Dec 1, 2010 Virginia

    I used the brewery's contact form, but I don't speak french. I'm hoping between English and my Google translated French, that they get the gist of what I'm trying to say.
     
  4. mountsnow1010

    mountsnow1010 Initiate (0) Jan 23, 2009 Vermont

    Awesome! Good luck. Be sure to report back if you get a response!!
     
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  5. NiceFly

    NiceFly Initiate (0) Dec 22, 2011 Tajikistan

    I do not know anything about the yeast for that beer itself, but I can share a good way to culture what is there.

    Have some starter wort ready the next time you open a bottle. Pour your beer leaving the dregs, obviously.
    Pour the starter right into the bottle and fill up about 1/3rd. Cover with foil, swirl as much as you can.
    Once you see activity pour the bottle into a few hundred ml of starter and go from there.
    Step up 1 to 5 each time the previous starter is about done until you get the desired cell number.

    This approach has never failed me. Good luck.
     
  6. mountsnow1010

    mountsnow1010 Initiate (0) Jan 23, 2009 Vermont

    Huh. Interesting way to do it, I hadn't thought about doing it that way. I was propagating some Conan this past weekend and I went from can -> flask instead of just adding the wort to the can. That's a pretty good idea, though. I can see it working especially well in a bottle, might be a bit riskier in a can but probably would still work, and frees up the flask for a few days while you overcome the lag time of growing up yeast from a very small amount...
     
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