Want to place an ad email luke@realbeer.co.nz
$50+GST / month

RealBeer.co.nz

Hey all I'm new around here.. Being winter I'm sure there are a lot of lagers brewing around the country (Myself included) so I'm trying to gauge peoples ideas on diacetyl rest, whens the best time and for how long????

Views: 455

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Diacetyl rest needs to happen at the end of active fermentation so that the yeast can actively scavenge their byproducts. A good time to do it is when krausen starts dropping back in. Aim for about 3-5 degrees above the fermentation temperature, and as for time, well it depends. Some people say a couple of  days, I go a bit longer (5 days), with lagers as I also want to get rid of any sulfur produced at the cooler fermentation temperature.

Cheers Dougal, I've been doing the rest after primary has finished and for about 3 days, give or take a few hours, unfortunately I forgot to turn off my heat pad the other night and by the morning it was up to 20^c :( ...so yeah we'll have to wait and see the outcome of that...

I dont see any issues with 20c. That is perfectly fine for Diacetyl rest. Someone with more experience may be able to help more though.

20C should be fine - as long as your heat pad wasn't in direct contact with the bottom of your fermentor - if so its likely the yeast cake got a bit hotter than 20 and you might have some yeast autolysis flavours.

Poo's... Only the black tee shirt the fermenter is wrapped in to protect it from the heat pad...

Interesting, I hadn't thought of that either. I have a light bulb sitting underneath my fermenter. Might have to move it for the next brew

You never know til you try it but I got a layer of dark brown yeast and an odd burnt tyre flavour in a Blonde from what I figured was a direct contact with heat pad a while back. 

Nowadays I stick a piece of 19mm pine on top of the pad as an insulator/ heat disperser.

RSS

© 2024   Created by nzbrewer.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service