I've been getting underwhelming head retention in beers I've crash chilled. I bulk prime and bottle the beer while still cold.
It's not such an issue for American Pale Ales & IPAs because the hops help with foam stability, but it is a big problem with my lagers (which also sit chilled in the fermenter for much longer than Pales & IPAs do, so there's a slight chance that's the problem, although I doubt it).
I've done some initial trouble-shooting (such as making sure my mash steps suited foam stability and also that my grains include something to boost foam, like including ~5% CaraPils).
After some experimenting I think I can also rule out crashing too quickly (because I chilled one batch so very slowly, over the course of 7 days, to go from 18C to 1C - and it still had noticeably poor head retention).
What I think is most likely the problem is that my bulk primed beer is going into bottles cold. And thus the yeast and sugar tends to settle. Over the next couple of weeks I always take each bottle and invert it and gently swirl the upside-down bottle to let the yeast & sugar mix a bit (do this maybe 2 times over 2 weeks).
Does anyone have some tips on how to boost head retention on bottled lagers? Or spot something in my process that could be changed?
If all else fails, I'm considering adding fresh yeast to the bottles (like CBC-1). I might even give krausening a go if I can time things right. But I'd rather a more simple solution.
It's not such an issue for American Pale Ales & IPAs because the hops help with foam stability, but it is a big problem with my lagers (which also sit chilled in the fermenter for much longer than Pales & IPAs do, so there's a slight chance that's the problem, although I doubt it).
I've done some initial trouble-shooting (such as making sure my mash steps suited foam stability and also that my grains include something to boost foam, like including ~5% CaraPils).
After some experimenting I think I can also rule out crashing too quickly (because I chilled one batch so very slowly, over the course of 7 days, to go from 18C to 1C - and it still had noticeably poor head retention).
What I think is most likely the problem is that my bulk primed beer is going into bottles cold. And thus the yeast and sugar tends to settle. Over the next couple of weeks I always take each bottle and invert it and gently swirl the upside-down bottle to let the yeast & sugar mix a bit (do this maybe 2 times over 2 weeks).
Does anyone have some tips on how to boost head retention on bottled lagers? Or spot something in my process that could be changed?
If all else fails, I'm considering adding fresh yeast to the bottles (like CBC-1). I might even give krausening a go if I can time things right. But I'd rather a more simple solution.