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Make a yeast starter by pouring approximately 100 ml (3 oz.) of juice and 100 ml (3 oz.) of hot water into a large glass mug. Sprinkle the yeast into this solution and allow the yeast to proliferate for about 30 minutes at room temperature. After the 30 minutes have elapsed, pour 3/4 of the yeast "slurry" volume into the carboy and 1/4 into the over flow vessels. The overflow containers could be a couple of gallon jugs or the 11 L plastic canister.
Sacchromyces bayanus is the yeast strain that we prefer using. With this strain we never experience stuck fermentions or a fermentation of prolonged duration.

Allowing the yeast access to oxygen at the beginning of fermentation during the growth phase helps the yeast produce its own lipids. Lipids are an essential component of the yeast cell membrane, necessary for the budding and growth of the yeast cells in the early stage of fermentation and for the protection of the yeast cell from alcohol toxicity in the latter stage of fermentation. To provide the yeast with oxygen it needs to multiply (please see the manufacturer's explanation Lalvin), place only a paper towel in the neck of the bottles for the first 24 - 48 hrs,