Here are all the things I need laid out. Notebook (of course!), blank slants, an oil lamp (in a real lab they'd use a bunsen burner), shot glass of vodka (etoh in a real lab) in which sits my wire inoculation loop (a bit of paperclip would work ok as well), sterile pipette, and a sterile test tube (I'd sterilized it when I made the blank slants).
The pipette and empty test tube are for holding the yeast starter culture that I'd made for this day's brew. It was a simple, straightforward 2 liter culture of (in this case) White Labs WLP001. The point of the oil lamp or open flame is to create an area of updraft, so the other microorganisms in the air don't settle into whatever we're working on. So we grab a bit of yeast starter in the clean tube, light the lamp, and then, after practicing a bit without uncapping anything, we carefully:
Uncap the blank slant (I currently use plain test tubes with caps that I make out of foil) ,
After flaming the vodka off the inoculation loop to sterilize it, dip the loop in the yeast, and
draw the loop across the surface of the slant in a zigzag pattern. When I'm doing it, I can't see the trail of stuff that's left, so just watch what the loop does to try to achieve the pattern.
Then I carefully replace the foil cap on the tube. When I've repeated this for all of the slants I want to do, I put them in a ziplock bag and put them someplace warm to kind of 'bloom'. After a few days we should start to see evidence of yeast cells growing:
And we can see the zigzag streaks that I made, now in a line of yeast cells! Now that they are looking healthy, I put them in the fridge. There's still time for it all to go wrong, however- if you look back at this post I made in 2013... but at least it's usually fairly obvious!
Next, have a look at my procedure for propagating yeast from a slant to get a starter for a batch. In this case I've made about 15 slants, which saves me around $120 over the course of 15 batches of beer, rather than buying straight from White Labs!
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