A Fast 34/70 Lager Is A .....

Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum

Help Support Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Bada Bing Brewery

Well-Known Member
Joined
4/2/07
Messages
654
Reaction score
155
I put down a double batch pils on weekend - Wey pils, munich, carapils and a bit of melanoiden. Stepped mashed as normal. No chilled and did 2 seperate starters for each cube using 34/70 (didnt have any danish lager). Rehydrated yeasties and gave them 6 hrs on the stir plate - both went crazy. Chilled the starters to 11C and pitched into wort also at 11C.
OG was 1048. In three days it's down to 1022 - is it me or is that just nuts for a lager??????? Temp is spot on, nothing out of the ordinary happened. Taste is as expected for time of ferment - nothing nasty.
Has anybody else had 34/70 going off it's tits like this???
Cheers
BBB
 
I do lagers almost exclusively with 34/70 and find they are close to final gravity after 4-5 days almost every time whether pitching dry, rehydrating, pitching warm or pitching cold.

If pitched cold on a yeast cake I find it can be close to fg after as little as 3 days.
 
Not at all surprising, my lagers with 34/70 usualy finish in 7-10 days, even at 9c.
 
This is absolutely spot on. Any longer, you need to start looking at yeast health issues.

Wes
 
Thanks men. This is my cherry popping 34/70 experience and I feel all warm now.
I take it though that a d-rest is on the cards ?? Should I start bumping up the temp 1C over the next few days to 15 or 16C??
Thanks again
BBB
 
Thanks men. This is my cherry popping 34/70 experience and I feel all warm now.
I take it though that a d-rest is on the cards ?? Should I start bumping up the temp 1C over the next few days to 15 or 16C??
Thanks again
BBB

Nah, just whack the temperature up to 18C quickly before terminal gravity and let it finish, about four days should do it.

Then quickly back to about 10C and then 1C drop per day, hold at 2-3C for a few days, drop to minus 2C for three days and you're done,

Steve.
 
Nah, just whack the temperature up to 18C quickly before terminal gravity and let it finish, about four days should do it.

Then quickly back to about 10C and then 1C drop per day, hold at 2-3C for a few days, drop to minus 2C for three days and you're done,

Steve.

Why the slow drop to 2-3C Steve? Interested to know why (closet yeast hugger ;))
I usually just d-rest and then drop to CC around 0 or -1 as quick as possible for however long with my other lagers ...
Cheers
BBB
 
Why the slow drop to 2-3C Steve? Interested to know why (closet yeast hugger ;))
I usually just d-rest and then drop to CC around 0 or -1 as quick as possible for however long with my other lagers ...
Cheers
BBB

Okay there is a bit of controversy using this method. It is not new and is used commercially. The principal behind this is, if you crash chill you put the yeast to sleep straight away - in other words they become inactive very quickly. Chilling slowly allows yeast to become aclimatised to the lower temperatures and still remain active, albeit somewhat less than at the higher temperatures.

That's the first part. The second reasoning behind this is the yeast play a major role in cleaning up fermentation by-products after all the sugars have been exhausted. The one we all hear about all the time of course is diacetyl. There is also acetaldehyde and no doubt a bunch of others I have never heard of.

From my experience in making lagers over the last few years, slow chilling has a major impact on the 'clean' taste profile of a lager and also has an major impact on the 'smoothness', in other words clean, crisp but not bitey or acidic taste. Lager should clean, crisp but also smooth to the pallate.

I have tried almost all variations of lager fermentation, most at least twice and using this method absolutely trumps any other method from my experience. I do, and always will believe that the brewer makes the wort and the yeast make the beer and if you keep the yeast at their very optimum, they will produce the optimum beer.

Steve
 
Okay there is a bit of controversy using this method. It is not new and is used commercially. The principal behind this is, if you crash chill you put the yeast to sleep straight away - in other words they become inactive very quickly. Chilling slowly allows yeast to become aclimatised to the lower temperatures and still remain active, albeit somewhat less than at the higher temperatures.

That's the first part. The second reasoning behind this is the yeast play a major role in cleaning up fermentation by-products after all the sugars have been exhausted. The one we all hear about all the time of course is diacetyl. There is also acetaldehyde and no doubt a bunch of others I have never heard of.

From my experience in making lagers over the last few years, slow chilling has a major impact on the 'clean' taste profile of a lager and also has an major impact on the 'smoothness', in other words clean, crisp but not bitey or acidic taste. Lager should clean, crisp but also smooth to the pallate.

I have tried almost all variations of lager fermentation, most at least twice and using this method absolutely trumps any other method from my experience. I do, and always will believe that the brewer makes the wort and the yeast make the beer and if you keep the yeast at their very optimum, they will produce the optimum beer.

Steve
I don't follow the logic of this, but will admit to not having tried the method either. Why would you slowly chill to reduce the activity slowly rather than allow more yeast to continue the conditioning which they should do more effectively and efficiently at the usual optimal yeast temp?
My method has always been to really lager a lager and not to rush it. I leave it at temp for at least a month even if terminal gravity is hit to clean up by-products. I taste frequently and when I feel it's no longer improving I crash chill.
 
I put down a double batch pils on weekend - Wey pils, munich, carapils and a bit of melanoiden. Stepped mashed as normal. No chilled and did 2 seperate starters for each cube using 34/70 (didnt have any danish lager). Rehydrated yeasties and gave them 6 hrs on the stir plate - both went crazy. Chilled the starters to 11C and pitched into wort also at 11C.
OG was 1048. In three days it's down to 1022 - is it me or is that just nuts for a lager??????? Temp is spot on, nothing out of the ordinary happened. Taste is as expected for time of ferment - nothing nasty.
Has anybody else had 34/70 going off it's tits like this???
Cheers
BBB


What size starter did you use?
 
Okay there is a bit of controversy using this method. It is not new and is used commercially. The principal behind this is, if you crash chill you put the yeast to sleep straight away - in other words they become inactive very quickly. Chilling slowly allows yeast to become aclimatised to the lower temperatures and still remain active, albeit somewhat less than at the higher temperatures.

That's the first part. The second reasoning behind this is the yeast play a major role in cleaning up fermentation by-products after all the sugars have been exhausted. The one we all hear about all the time of course is diacetyl. There is also acetaldehyde and no doubt a bunch of others I have never heard of.

From my experience in making lagers over the last few years, slow chilling has a major impact on the 'clean' taste profile of a lager and also has an major impact on the 'smoothness', in other words clean, crisp but not bitey or acidic taste. Lager should clean, crisp but also smooth to the pallate.

I have tried almost all variations of lager fermentation, most at least twice and using this method absolutely trumps any other method from my experience. I do, and always will believe that the brewer makes the wort and the yeast make the beer and if you keep the yeast at their very optimum, they will produce the optimum beer.

Steve

Sorry man, I call BS.

If you're at terminal gravity, dropping temp over a few days will not make any difference over a straight crash chill. The yeast is finished, therefore any 'conditioning' should already be done - that's why we do a diacetyl rest....


Cheers
 
They cover lagering in the yeast book by White and Zainasheff, and a lot better than I could attempt to regurgitate myself.

Paraphrased slightly, it says "The reality is that very little happens once you take the yeast below 4c. If you want the yeast to be active and to carry on reduction of by-products, it happens much faster at higher temperatures.

Crashing the temperature or lowering it slowly makes little flavour difference if you are dropping it below 4c. However very rapid reduction in temperature (less than 6 hours) at the end of fermentation can cause the yeast to excrete more ester compounds instead of retaining them.

If you plan to repitch the yeast you should avoid sudden temperature changes (up or down), as it can cause the yeast to express heat shock proteins."
 
They cover lagering in the yeast book by White and Zainasheff, and a lot better than I could attempt to regurgitate myself.

Paraphrased slightly, it says "The reality is that very little happens once you take the yeast below 4c. If you want the yeast to be active and to carry on reduction of by-products, it happens much faster at higher temperatures.

Crashing the temperature or lowering it slowly makes little flavour difference if you are dropping it below 4c. However very rapid reduction in temperature (less than 6 hours) at the end of fermentation can cause the yeast to excrete more ester compounds instead of retaining them.

If you plan to repitch the yeast you should avoid sudden temperature changes (up or down), as it can cause the yeast to express heat shock proteins."

Nice addition thanks Felten
 
Sorry man, I call BS.

If you're at terminal gravity, dropping temp over a few days will not make any difference over a straight crash chill. The yeast is finished, therefore any 'conditioning' should already be done - that's why we do a diacetyl rest....


Cheers

It's not bullshit Nick, terminal gravity doesn't mean the yeast is finished even after a diacetyl rest. By your reckoning, you should be removing the beer from the yeast immediately after the diacetyl rest because it has no further use - removal by racking, filtering or both for example.

By my reckoning, the yeast is still working down to low temperatures. Shocking the yeast by crash chilling stops the yeast working.

Yeast is not the only thing happening in lagering but it plays a major role down to about 3C. Once we go below that, it stops and floculates out. Around 0C proteins, polyphenols, hop polyphenols etc bind and fall out of solution and this is also important in lagering and beer stability/longevity.


However, this is home brewing, we can do whatever we like, there are no rules and no one forcing us to use any particular procedure. no rights, no wrongs.

Steve
 
Sorry man, I call BS.

If you're at terminal gravity, dropping temp over a few days will not make any difference over a straight crash chill. The yeast is finished, therefore any 'conditioning' should already be done - that's why we do a diacetyl rest....


Cheers

Yeast doesn't only metabolise sugar - you said it yourself - a D-rest cleans up the diacetyl and metabolises it to alpha-acetolactate which has a much higher flavour threshold and therefore the beer doesn't taste buttery anymore. There is other effects from the yeast after the sugar's all gone - e.g Felten's point that the esters are increased if the beer is crash chilled. I don't think yeast needs sugar to carry out its metabolism except for of course the pathway that produces alcohol (and glycerin) from sugar

Personally i reckon leaving the beer at D-rest temperatures for a few days longer than is necessary does some cleanup quicker then crash chilling to drop the yeast, polyphenols, proteins etc is the way to go, but of course whatever works for you and your equipment
 
And a quote from White Labs Wyeast - http://www.wyeastlab.com/he_b_fermentation.cfm

Conditioning

The conditioning stage takes place when the terminal gravity has been reached and the tank is cooled to refrigeration temperatures (31F - 38F, 0C - 3C). During this time the yeast continues to flocculate and settle. The yeast also conditions the beer by reducing various undesirable flavor compounds. Ales do not benefit from long conditioning times like lagers do. The desirable flavors in ales will decrease with age and therefore it is recommended that conditioning be as short as possible before packaging. Exposure to oxygen at this stage is extremely detrimental to beer quality.

Conditioning Summary:
Most of the yeast is removed from beer
Formation and precipitation of haze forming proteins
Reduction and mellowing of harsh flavors
Reduction of sulfur compounds, diacetyl, and acetaldehyde
Flavor stabilization
 
Hmm I've just put down a 1.052 lager with 2x 34/70 and SG has not changed a point in 7 days. There's a fair layer on the top and a decent cake on the bottom. It was pitched at 12c and reduced to 10c over 2 days. I raised it back up to 12c and gave it a bit of a splash, but I have a feeling something more sinister is at play if everyone else is finding this yeast to be speedy!
 
Hmm I've just put down a 1.052 lager with 2x 34/70 and SG has not changed a point in 7 days. There's a fair layer on the top and a decent cake on the bottom. It was pitched at 12c and reduced to 10c over 2 days. I raised it back up to 12c and gave it a bit of a splash, but I have a feeling something more sinister is at play if everyone else is finding this yeast to be speedy!

As they say (used to say) Relax, Don't Worry Have Another Homebrew.

My suggestion is NOT to intefere with it at this stage it is quite succeptable to infection. What is happening is the yeast is reproducing at this stage, once it gets to the optimum level it will start to metabolise the sugars a lot faster.

If you're new to lager strains, they work a lot slower than ale strains and are bottom fermenting meaning you're not going to get this massive kraussen with big brown yeasties on top

RDWHAHB

Steve
 
As they say (used to say) Relax, Don't Worry Have Another Homebrew.

My suggestion is NOT to intefere with it at this stage it is quite succeptable to infection. What is happening is the yeast is reproducing at this stage, once it gets to the optimum level it will start to metabolise the sugars a lot faster.

If you're new to lager strains, they work a lot slower than ale strains and are bottom fermenting meaning you're not going to get this massive kraussen with big brown yeasties on top

RDWHAHB

Steve

Relax, have another home brew haha That's a quote in a 30 year old brewing book my grandfather gave me.

I'm new to 34/70, however I've used s23 and s189 plenty of times and they've always at least done something after 72 hours - and I always use two packs (22g) so that I can pitch cold.
 
Back
Top