I've found this relating to carbonating Lager, (thanks to MHB again)
"Allow the beer to warm back up and like temporary haze will promptly go back into solution - undoing all you have achieved by lagering.
Best to rack the beer to a priming bucket Cold (leaving all the precipitated matter in the primary) with the right amount of sugar mix well and bottle. If you are worried about the amount of yeast in solution you could add a bit of a nice clean yeast to the priming bucket (rehydrate it first) only a gram or two would be enough for a 23L batch"
So this is the plan. Bottling bucket, bulk prime and add 1 gram of hydrated new lager yeast, bottle and sit for a few weeks back in the temp controlled fridge at 13.5'C. Then I'll chill a couple and see how it went.
The SG has dropped right down to 1.002 yesterday and it is a very clean, clear and crisp beer already so I'm hoping for a success with this. A lot of time and fridge space over quite a few weeks now. I think I'll wait for winter before doing it again.
"Allow the beer to warm back up and like temporary haze will promptly go back into solution - undoing all you have achieved by lagering.
Best to rack the beer to a priming bucket Cold (leaving all the precipitated matter in the primary) with the right amount of sugar mix well and bottle. If you are worried about the amount of yeast in solution you could add a bit of a nice clean yeast to the priming bucket (rehydrate it first) only a gram or two would be enough for a 23L batch"
So this is the plan. Bottling bucket, bulk prime and add 1 gram of hydrated new lager yeast, bottle and sit for a few weeks back in the temp controlled fridge at 13.5'C. Then I'll chill a couple and see how it went.
The SG has dropped right down to 1.002 yesterday and it is a very clean, clear and crisp beer already so I'm hoping for a success with this. A lot of time and fridge space over quite a few weeks now. I think I'll wait for winter before doing it again.