Yeast Management Flashcards
Top cropping yeast
Usually much cleaner and of higher quality
Bottom cropping yeast
Contamination with non-yeast solids. Sensitive to intensive fermentation practices (eg high gravity brewing). Stress can cause mutation.
Pure yeast culture
A collection of cells that is of the same strain and free from any other cell type, both yeast and bacteria
Yeast master culture
A single pure strain made up of pure cells with identical genomes
Handling yeast cultures: Slope method
-Low cost, easy to manage
-Contamination risk, risk of genetic variants because cells continue to grow in storage phase, requires subculture every ~2 months
Handling yeast cultures: -80° storage
-Less frequent subculturing compared with slope method
-More costly than conventional cold storage
Handling yeast cultures: Freeze drying
-Stable for at least 1 year, not too expensive
-Stressful for yeast, most cells die, drying process can create genetic variants
Handling yeast cultures: Liquid nitrogen
-Gold standard method, infinite storage, minimal viability loss
-Regular supply of liquid nitrogen and bespoke containers, risk of O2 depletion in confined spaces
Handling yeast cultures: Active dried yeast
-Bulk supply, shelf life of at least 1 year if vacuum sealed
-Shelf life only a few days if seal is broken, limited choice of strains
Laboratory propagation
Day 1: Slope working culture
Day 3: 10mL static culture
Day 6: 100mL shake flask
Day 9: 3L aerated culture with sterile filter
Day 14: 20L aerated culture with sterile filter