Lord Raja Goomba I
Prisoner of Sobriety
I have noted that many keggers on AHB cold crash at 4 degrees in the fridge before kegging. Now, assuming that they force carbonate (which almost all do), there is no need for residual yeast in the keg (in fact it's probably considered a cosmetic blemish).
The question is, can one cold crash a beer in the same manner before bottling. I rack before bottling, but I'm finding that there is just too much sediment for my liking. I'd like to have some beers with far less (read almost none) - APA, faux-lagers and the like.
Has anyone who bottles (or has bottled in the past) had any experience with cold crashing? Does it work? Do you need to adjust sugar calculations to accommodate far less viable yeast (or leave it longer - something I don't want to do).
Any help would be appreciated.
Cheers
Goomba
The question is, can one cold crash a beer in the same manner before bottling. I rack before bottling, but I'm finding that there is just too much sediment for my liking. I'd like to have some beers with far less (read almost none) - APA, faux-lagers and the like.
Has anyone who bottles (or has bottled in the past) had any experience with cold crashing? Does it work? Do you need to adjust sugar calculations to accommodate far less viable yeast (or leave it longer - something I don't want to do).
Any help would be appreciated.
Cheers
Goomba