I am preparing a yeast starter for the first time and I have a couple of how and why questions.
I am planning on brewing an Imperial Blonde Ale and I want to go big, and possibly add an extra can of malt extract to see what happens.
I am using liquid yeast and my plan is to start it and multiply it until there are enough cells swimming around to get a strong ferment.
Here are the steps that I have done so far:
1. I boiled 1 cup of water with 1/2 cup dry malt extract and 1/4 wyeast nutrient.
2. I steralized a gallon jug, stopper, and airlock.
3. I filled the jug with the boiled wort and let it cool to room temp while also letting the liquid yeast warm up to room temp.
4. I added the yeast to the cooled wort and capped it with the airlock.
I did all of this yesterday and my plan is to let it do it's thing, then add more wort and do the whole process again to create a double batch.
Here are my questions:
Am I doing this right? Should I pour off the spent wort before I add more? Should I be mixing up a larger volume?
When it is finally ready to pitch, should I dump the whole thing into my brew or leave it in the fridge and pour off the spent wort from the yeast?
Thanks in advance for your help!
cheers,
Brannon







