Making Plates and Slants

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Before you can culture yeast, you need to create sterile media (slants, plates, starter volumes, glycerin solutions ...) that can then be used to store or propagate yeast.

What is needed

Plates needed.jpg

Yeast culturing at home does actually not require a lot of specialized equipment. Here is a list of what is needed:

Hardware

pressure canner

When working with very small amounts of yeasts sanitation will not be sufficient anymore. Sterilization, which means complete elimination of all living organisms, including their spores, is needed. But this cannot be done by chemical means or boiling at atmospheric pressure. Microbiology labs are using autoclaves to sterilize their vessels, tools and media. An autoclave uses pressurized steam to achieve temperatures high enough for sterilization. Though most home brewers do not have access to autoclaves, the function of an autoclave can easily be achieved with a pressure canner. Not only is a pressure canner much cheaper than an autoclave, it also has its uses in the kitchen and can be used to can starter wort.

When buying a pressure canner, look for a model that works at at least 15 psi. This will produce a temperature high enough for sterilization.

vials

Vials are needed for making slant cultures. Look for ones that are autoclavable. There are various shapes available. A post in a forum pointed me to this source Cynmar. These vials are great for slants and small volumes of culture wort. Another great advantage to slant tubes with rounded bottom (Morebeer) is that they can stand on their own.

petri dishes

If you want to work with single cell cultures or purify a yeast culture, you will need Petri dishes. Get the glass ones, which can be cleaned and reused. I use the 75 mm ones from Cynmar. They are large enough to streak out yeast cultures and still fairly cheap.

baby food jars

The glass baby food jars can be used to hold agar cultures or small amounts of starter wort. Now that I have enough vials and plates I don't need them for agar cultures anymore, but still used them to keep sterile wort for the 2nd stage of propagation.

syringe

A small oral syringe (5 ml) works great for measuring the amount of media that is added to the vials and plates. If you don't have small children and get them when you buy medicine, ask for them at the pharmacy.

tape

I use painters tape to hold the Petri dishes closed after they have been sterilized and cooled. I also use the tape to give the vials an additional seal and attach notes.

Software

wort

You'll need about 100 - 150ml of 8 - 10 Plato wort (1.032 - 1.040 SG). I use left-over wort from a batch of beer. You can make wort with malt extract, but having it hopped would make it more selective for yeast since many bacteria don't grow in the presence of alpha acids.

agar

Agar is used to solidify the wort. Gelatin may work as well, but I haven't tried it yet. Since Agar is a common vegetarian substitute for gelatin, it should be available at health food stores. I couldn't find it there and ordered in from a well stocked home-brew store.

Making Small Starter Volumes

Plates filling starter.jpg

When stepping up from a slant or plate, I noticed that just using boiled wort for the initial steps wasn't sanitary enough and I frequently ended up with spoiled yeast. Because of that I also fill a few of the slants with 10 ml of wort and sterilize them in the pressure cooker. This starter is then either dumped onto a slant or inoculated with yeast from a plate or slant.

Making Slants

Plates slants.jpg

For slants and plates agar media is needed. I used about 3-4 % agar by weight:

  • 100 ml wort
  • 3-4 g agar

mix this in a heat proof vessel and heat (stove or microwave) to dissolve the agar. You will notice that it gets thicker. There is no danger in boiling it, but boiling is not necessary at this point. Use the syringe to measure 5 ml of agar into each vial.

Making Plates

Plates plates.jpg

Squirt 10 ml of the agar media into each petri dish.

If you are interested in growing other microbes than yeast on plates or want to use plates for sanitation tests you can also make a glucose agar media which is not as selective as the lower pH and hopped wort agar media.

Glucose bases media:

  • 100 ml water
  • 5 g glucose (corn sugar)
  • pinch of yeast nutrient and/or Diammonium Phosphate
  • 3g agar

Sterilizing

Plates pressure canner.jpg

Before you load the pressure canner you need to add some water. There needs to be enough water to last through the 15 – 20 min sterilization process, but not so much that it comes up the sides of the Petri dishes. This may require that you elevate the supporting false bottom that comes with the pressure canner. I can simply insert mine upside-down, which raises it further away from the bottom.

Place the plates and vials on that false bottom. The vials shown can actually stand on their own and will not tip over during the sterilization (at least for me). Once all items that need to be sterilized have been added, place it on the stove and add the lid. But do close the pressure relieve valve yet.

Turn on the heat and wait for steam to develop and blow out. Letting some steam blow-out first will replace the air inside with steam, which does a much better job with sterilizing. Now close the pressure relieve valve and wait until pressure builds up. Read the instructions that came with the pressure canner as the procedure is the same as if you would pressure can items.

The pressure has been reached when steam is blown off by the pressure relieve valve. Now wait 15 – 20 min until you turn off the heat or remove it from the burner.

Let the canner cool down on its own and do not try to speed things up by venting steam or placing it into a cool water bath otherwise the media inside the vials may release steam to quickly and causing the vials to spill or burst.


Cooling

Plates cooling.jpg

Once the canner has cooled enough for the pressure to be gone, open it. Tighten the caps on all the vials and let them cool on the counter. Don't worry about the condensation on in the petri dishes. Just seal them with masking tape once they are cooled without opening them first. Opening them to shake off the moisture risks contamination and the moisture will be absorbed by the slant media during storage.

To make slants I lay the vial onto a chop stick such that the media stops shortly before the top of the vial. This gives me a nice large surface area later. Once cooled I seal the top of the vials with painter's masking tape. This way I don’t have to worry about any contaminants getting under the cap.

Store

Plates done.jpg

You can store the slants and plates anywhere. Since they have been sterilized, they should not spoil. To prevent drying-out of the slants I keep them in a large zip-top bag.


Next: Inoculating Plates and Slants