jollster101
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- 20/4/13
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Hi all
I am fermenting my first ever lager which is a NZ Pilsner Fresh Wort Kit in a fermentasaurus using 2 sachets of Saflager S-23 yeast which was recommended by the LHBS (both sachets were rehydrated before pitching again as per the advice from the guy at the shop).
I was advised to ferment at around 12C and so the night before I set the STC-1000 to 12C and popped the cube into the fridge to come down to the relevant temp ahead of pitching the following day. Standard sanitisation process followed and pitched yesterday morning and set the temp controller to 12C.
Its been 24 hours and as of this morning there was no activity and the SG remained at 1.046 (via a Tilt hydrometer). Compared to ales (which I have done 5 of with good results), do lager yeasts generally take a bit more time to get going because the temp is a bit colder? I'm not overly concerned but just wondered given this is the first one I've done.
Another q I have relates to the diacetyl rest. The HBS reps advice was that when the SG gets down to about 1.020, raise the temp to about 17C and then leave for about another week before cold crashing. I was a bit surprised to only raise to 17C as reading John Palmer's book his advice was that you typically upped the temp by 8-12C for a lager. Is the amount you would raise the temp by dependant on the yeast being used?
When raising the temp for a diacetyl rest can I just set the STC-1000 to the required temp and allow it to come up within a 12 hours or so or is it better to increase by say a couple of degrees a day?
Any advise from the seasoned brewers on lagers would be great.
Thanks
I am fermenting my first ever lager which is a NZ Pilsner Fresh Wort Kit in a fermentasaurus using 2 sachets of Saflager S-23 yeast which was recommended by the LHBS (both sachets were rehydrated before pitching again as per the advice from the guy at the shop).
I was advised to ferment at around 12C and so the night before I set the STC-1000 to 12C and popped the cube into the fridge to come down to the relevant temp ahead of pitching the following day. Standard sanitisation process followed and pitched yesterday morning and set the temp controller to 12C.
Its been 24 hours and as of this morning there was no activity and the SG remained at 1.046 (via a Tilt hydrometer). Compared to ales (which I have done 5 of with good results), do lager yeasts generally take a bit more time to get going because the temp is a bit colder? I'm not overly concerned but just wondered given this is the first one I've done.
Another q I have relates to the diacetyl rest. The HBS reps advice was that when the SG gets down to about 1.020, raise the temp to about 17C and then leave for about another week before cold crashing. I was a bit surprised to only raise to 17C as reading John Palmer's book his advice was that you typically upped the temp by 8-12C for a lager. Is the amount you would raise the temp by dependant on the yeast being used?
When raising the temp for a diacetyl rest can I just set the STC-1000 to the required temp and allow it to come up within a 12 hours or so or is it better to increase by say a couple of degrees a day?
Any advise from the seasoned brewers on lagers would be great.
Thanks