Brewers yeast?

captmicha

Le tired.
Dec 6, 2006
2,052
0
36
39
Maryland, USA
Where do you guys get your brewing yeast from? It's pretty expensive compared to baking yeast. I wondering where is the cheapest place to buy? Thanks for any input.
 
Brewers Yeast or yeast for home brewing?
Brewers yeast is a food supplement usually sold for the B vitamin benefit.
I don't brew beer, buy I'd purchase from the near by home brew shop, or baring that, on line from any number of shops catering to home brewing.

There are probably as many online brewing forums as there are fish forums, by the way.
 
I'm not interested in brewing so why would I join a brewing forum??

I mean brewing yeast, yeast that people generally use for home brewing but in my case, for DIY CO2.
 
We have a store here named Roxbury mills which is a farm and garden center. They selling brewing supplies as well. This is where I get mine from. I would check your area for similar stores that sells seeds, plants, etc.
 
I read somewhere that you should buy the yeast used for making wine since the wine yeast will tolerate higher alcohol levels and hopefully your batch will last longer than normal yest. Although more expensive I think the longer fermentation time may become cost effective and less time consuming Let me know how it works out..
 
Standard baking yeast granules from the grocery store works fine and lasts about three weeks before starting to peter out. At a half teaspoon per batch, you get six batches from a packet.
Expensive yeast will gain you hours and perhaps days. The quantity of sugar is the first limiting factor, not the type of yeast. For a two liter bottle, 2 cups of sugar is about all that can be used effectively. The next limiting factor is the acidity of the solution over time.
 
I got mine from a local home brew shop. I used champagne yeast. It was quite a bit more expensive than bakers yeast, but not too terrible. The sugar was a comparable cost, per batch of DIY Co2. Granted, I used 2 cups of sugar, and no more than a tablespoon (can't remember the actual amount off the top of my head) of yeast per batch...

Just be sure to get actual yeast intended for home brewing, and not "brewer's yeast". Brewer's yeast, the common food additive, is actually deactivated yeast, and you need active yeast to make DIY Co2 work.
 
There are on-line sources for yeast, just do a google seach. personally I am using champagne yeast and it works great. I add a 1/4(maybe it's an 1/8) teaspoon of baking soda to control acidity. Works great.
 
My yeast of choice right now is Cooper's Brewers Yeast.

Haven't tried the champaign yeast yet. My Jell-O is practically all gone by the time I have to refresh them so not sure how much more life I would get using it.
 
AquariaCentral.com