But here is the thing: sure yeast will bud and reproduce and they do that rapidly but it is not clear that daughter cells are going to ferment your must as well as a larger colony of mature cells and it is unclear that pitching a small colony of cells into a large pool rich with sugar will not result in flabby, lazy cells that fail to ferment with sufficient vigor (not speed) to expel odors that may be less than desirable. I am not a chemist and not a dietician.. but I am sure you are familiar with published "portion sizes" (1/2 cup of cooked pasta is a portion?). You cannot under ordinary circumstances over-pitch yeast but you can under-pitch. I would treat one gallon to one pack of yeast. and if you are worried about the "speed" of the fermentation then lower the temperature. What you want is a vigorous fermentation , not a fast one, and you want that fermentation to be clean. If your starting gravity is around 1.090 or higher I don't see how you can get that with less than 1 pack per gallon (assuming your rehydration protocol is top notch and you are pitching a high percentatge of viable yeast cells and not killing about 50 % of the cells before they have rebuilt their cell walls