Yeast Handling — Pitch, Recycle, Repitch
How much dry yeast to pitch (and why liquid calculators mislead), when to rehydrate vs sprinkle, how to store packs, and how to harvest and repitch a strain to save money without losing quality.
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Yeast is the only living ingredient in beer, and treating it well is most of what separates a clean fermentation from a sluggish or off one. The good news: modern dry yeast is robust, stable, and simple to use well. This guide covers pitching dry yeast, storing it, and harvesting and repitching a strain to brew the same beer for a fraction of the yeast cost.
How much to pitch
The headline mistake is overpitching because a liquid-yeast pitch calculator told you to. Those tools assume liquid yeast and overestimate dry yeast by 3–6×.
For dry yeast, weigh it: 0.5–1.0 g/L. For a typical 20–23 L ale that’s about 11–23 g (one or two standard 11 g sachets) — not the 30–60 g a liquid calculator suggests. Weigh by weight; no cell counting needed, because dry yeast viability is consistent and known.
Pitch rate still shapes flavour: underpitching stresses the yeast (more esters, fusels, slow start); heavy overpitching gives a faster, cleaner, less expressive ferment. For most ales, one well-stored sachet at the right temperature is the no-drama default.
Sprinkle or rehydrate?
For modern Lallemand/Fermentis dry strains, sprinkling dry onto the wort is the preferred method — it performs as well as rehydration for most beers:
- Sanitise the scissors and the top of the pack.
- Sprinkle the yeast evenly over the wort surface as the fermenter fills.
- The motion of filling mixes it in — no stirring needed. Don’t submerge the sachet.
Rehydrate instead when the wort is stressful for yeast:
- High gravity (above ~1.065) — more osmotic stress; rehydration helps.
- Soured / low-pH wort — rehydration buffers the shock.
If you rehydrate: sprinkle the yeast onto 10× its weight of clean ~30–35 °C water (e.g. 11 g → 110 mL), leave 15 minutes undisturbed, stir gently, then step the temperature down toward the wort in stages so the slurry is within 10 °C of the wort before pitching. Never use distilled/RO water, and never let it cool slowly on its own — both cost viability.
Oxygen: first pitch vs repitch
This catches people out:
- First pitch of dry yeast — do NOT aerate the wort. Dry yeast is grown under high oxygen and packed with the sterol and fatty-acid reserves it needs. (The splashing at transfer in the walkthrough is plenty.)
- Repitched (slurry) yeast — DO aerate, to 8–10 ppm dissolved oxygen (>10 ppm for high-gravity wort). Harvested yeast has spent its reserves and needs oxygen to rebuild.
- High-gravity wort, even on a first pitch — some oxygen helps; or pitch more.
Storing packs
| Situation | Rule |
|---|---|
| Unopened, sealed, kept below 4 °C | Good to the printed expiry — stable for years |
| Opened, not vacuum-resealed | Use within 3 days, kept cold and dry |
| Opened, immediately vacuum-resealed | Good to expiry below 4 °C |
| Pack soft / lost its vacuum | Discard — air exposure has degraded it |
Keep a spare sachet in the fridge as a stuck-fermentation rescue — dry yeast’s shelf stability means you can always have backup on hand without planning ahead.
Harvesting and repitching
Repitching a harvested strain cuts cost per brew dramatically, and dry yeast is a great base for it because generation one is always a known, clean starting point. Only bother for strains you brew regularly (e.g. a house workhorse).
Harvest the healthy fraction:
- Promote flocculation with adequate calcium (50–150 ppm) in the mash.
- If using a conical/cone fermenter, dump the first dark slurry (early flocculators and trub), then harvest the creamy, light-brown middle of the cone within ~24 h of reaching terminal gravity. Avoid the top (slow, mutated cells).
Store it: chill rapidly to 4 °C, in a sanitised vessel, minimal air, and use within about a week.
Repitch it: aerate the wort (see above), and add a yeast nutrient — the benefit grows from about generation 4 onward. Keep simple records: strain, generation, source batch, and how it fermented.
Never repitch from these
Yeast harvested from these beers is too stressed or contaminated to trust:
- Any sour beer — never.
- High gravity (>8% ABV).
- Heavily hopped (>60 IBU) or heavily dry-hopped beers — hop compounds degrade yeast vitality.
After several generations, bacteria and wild yeast slowly accumulate; refresh from a new pack periodically rather than chasing a strain forever.
Quick reference
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Dry yeast pitch rate | 0.5–1.0 g/L (weigh it) |
| Use a liquid calculator? | No — overestimates dry yeast 3–6× |
| Sprinkle or rehydrate? | Sprinkle, unless high gravity (>1.065) or sour |
| Aerate on first dry pitch? | No |
| Aerate on repitch? | Yes — 8–10 ppm |
| Opened pack, not resealed | Use within 3 days |
| Harvested slurry storage | 4 °C, ~1 week |
| Don’t repitch from | Sours, >8% ABV, >60 IBU, heavy dry hop |