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Hi Tim,
You you want as a minimum the primary fermentation to be complete before crashing. I personally wait a week into the secondary fermentation before I do a diacetyl rest and then I start lowering the temperature, which I do at 3 degrees a day until I reach 3-4 degrees. I do this because fast cooling causes stress to the yeast and any stress to the yeast can cause off flavours to be produced (which may not be reabsorbed by the yeast). I have moved on to kegging now but when I was bottling I would bottle with sugar, allow the bottles to naturally come up to room temperature again (again for the reason mentioned above) If room temp is below the original fermentation temp now place in your fermentation box at the yeasts recommended fermentation temp for 48H then I would place these in just a dark cupboard for a couple of weeks before placing in the fridge ready for serving.
Note: with this method there really is a minimal amount of yeast carried over from primary- secondary- bottling. so heavier beers I tended to pitch a little bit of yeast into my priming sugar bucket to ensure carbonation.
Hope this helps
Hi Tim,
I have only done a couple of lagers so far but I timed the D rest by the appearance of the krausen. Wait till it peaks and then let it fall back to point to maybe a third of its height before slowly raising the temp. This may not be the best method but there was no traces of diacetyl in the finished beer.
You could also do a gravity reading but because I use carboys I don't usually bother.
Ryans advice is good I follow a similar method called the Tasty larger method which works on SG rather than sight for primary ferment and diacetyl rest:
I pitch and oxygenate wort at 12C and hold until the gravity drops 50% of the way to terminal gravity
I then raise the fermentation temperature by 4 degrees to 19C and hold until the gravity drops 90% of the way to terminal gravity.
I then raise the fermentation temperature by 4 degrees to 23C and hold until I reach terminal gravity.
With this method, 75% of the fermentation takes place at 15 or below, 90% at 17 or below.
maybe I did do this off the top of my head at work here it the original info if you want to work it out
I pitch and oxygenate at 55F and hold until the gravity drops 50% of the way to terminal gravity (For example, if my OG is 1.052 and I expect to finish at about 1.010, then a drop of .021 gravity points would be 50%.)
I then raise the fermentation temperature by 3 degrees to 58F and hold until the gravity drops 75% of the way to terminal gravity.
I then raise the fermentation temperature by 4 degrees to 62F and hold until the gravity drops 90% of the way to terminal gravity.
I then raise the fermentation temperature by 4 degrees to 66F and hold until I reach terminal gravity.
With this method, 75% of the fermentation takes place at 58F or below, 90% at 62F or below.
Awesome, happy to help. I need to hurry up and finish my brew sculpture so I can get back to brewing.
this is a good read, somewhere i have a link to a video from kai
accelerated pilsner brewing
http://braukaiser.com/wiki/index.php?title=Fermenting_Lagers
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