Lagering is a bit more complex, but one part of Lagering is called "Chill Proofing".My kegerator holds 4 kegs and the temperature is set at 52F (11C). As long as there is still beer in the keg this beer is lagered at 11C. Ales are lagered, too. I have only 3 taps, so it takes usually ~1 month for the newest beer to get connected to the tap. This way my lagering time is minimum 1 month
Yes, you pretty much said it all MHB. The only other thing I would have said is, prior to the very cold conditioning/lagering is making sure the beer is not taken off the yeast too soon - what I call the first stage of lagering, which is making sure the yeast do a really good job of cleaning up fermentation by-products and lager yeast can do this down to quite cold temperatures. Also, to help precipitate polyphenols and unwanted proteins, use a fining agent. I use good old gelatine, one teaspoon dissolved in 500ml hot water per fermenter does the trick. I'm not vegan!Lagering is a bit more complex, but one part of Lagering is called "Chill Proofing".
At low temperatures chill haze forms, when polyphenols and large proteins join up producing haze, this starts happening at around 8oC and happens faster as you get cooler all the way down to the freezing point of the beer (~-1.5oC). If you let the beer warm back above ~20oC the process reverses and the haze disappears. Well mostly over time you will build up permanent haze.
Chill proofing involves keeping the beer very cold for long enough for the haze particles to form and precipitate, the beer is then racked off the trub, or it's dumped out the bottom of a conical. Either way the trub and the clarified beer must be separated before the beer is allowed to warm up.
10-12oC is generally regarded as an ideal cellaring temperature for English Ale; it certainly isn’t a Lagering temperature. In no small part the clean crisp nature of Lager comes from the removal of the large protein and polyphenols.
Might be worth having a bit more of a look at how you make your Lagers, I think you might be impressed at the improvement you get from Lagering properly. Braukaiser is well worth a read.
Mark
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