Yeast Starter Calculator

Size a DME starter to reach a target yeast cell count.

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The Yeast Starter Calculator sizes a dried malt extract (DME) starter to grow a liquid yeast pack up to the cell count your batch needs. It accounts for the yeast’s age and viability, estimates how many new cells a given starter volume will grow, and lists the exact DME and water to use.

How it works

The calculation has three parts.

1 — Viable starting cells. Liquid yeast dies off over time. The tool reduces your pack’s stated cell count by a daily viability decay (about 0.7% per day, roughly 21% per month):

viable cells = pack cells × (1 − 0.007)^age-in-days

2 — New growth. A starter grows new cells in proportion to its size relative to how densely the yeast is inoculated. The tool estimates new cells per litre of starter based on the inoculation rate, so a larger starter — or a more viable pack — yields more total cells.

3 — DME and water. A starter is brewed at about 1.037 gravity, which needs roughly 100 g of DME per litre of finished starter. The water volume is the starter volume itself (DME dissolves with negligible volume change).

Worked example

You need 200 billion cells. Your pack was 100 billion when packaged but is 45 days old, so viable cells are about 100 × (0.993)^45 ≈ 73 billion. A 2 L starter grows enough new cells to reach roughly your target. The recipe: 200 g DME topped to 2 L with water, boiled, cooled, and pitched with the old pack.

Tips

  • Always confirm the final estimated cell count meets or exceeds your target — step up to a larger starter if it falls short.
  • A stir plate increases yields significantly; without one, size up.
  • Build the starter 24–36 hours before brew day so the yeast is at peak activity.
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