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tips on harvesting a culture for re-use
Once the wort has fermented out (allowing 2 weeks total is a good rule of thumb), decant the beer and pitch the collected yeast into 500ml of starter wort, again lowering the pH of the starter wort to 4.5 with lactic acid. After the starter wort has been fermented, the yeast should have enough of a population to ferment out a 1 gallon batch of wort. Keep the recipe of the wort simple, and in the 1.050 gravity range. The yeast cell count should be high enough at this point to out-compete bacteria and lower the pH of the wort within a few days. The pH of the 1 gallon batch, therefore, does not need to be lowered, although the brewer may choose to do so anyway. For [[Wild_Yeast_Isolation#Safety|safety reasons]], test to make sure that the beer fully attenuated and has a pH of 4.5 or less. Allow for one month after fermenting the 1 gallon batch of beer before sampling. If it smells like feces or vomit, do not sample it and throw it away. If the beer smells ok, feel free to sample the beer to see if the wild yeast produced a good tasting beer. David Thornton from [[SouthYeast Labs]] estimates that only about 10% of yeast that can fully attenuate produces favorable results, so failures are to be expected (keep trying!) <ref name="Thornton"></ref>. Fermenting a few batches of beer at different temperatures is a useful method for identifying the ideal fermentation temperature range for the yeast.
Once a wild culture has been determined to be something that the brewer wants to keep for future batches, yeast harvesting methods can be used to maintain the culture. See [http://www.wyeastlab.com/yeast-harvesting-re-pitching Wyeast's article on yeast harvesting] and [http://brulosophy.com/methods/yeast-harvesting/ harvesting from an over-built yeast starter].
See also: