yankinoz
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Directions I've found for lagering in bottle say to carbonate warm and then cold condition. What if the order is reversed? Rather than recap bottles, prime and bottle cold, lager right away and later warm to carbonate
A while back and on a whim I did this with two bottles of an Oktoberfest (S-189 lager yeast) and preferred them to the rest of the batch that was carbonated and then lagered in bottle. After two months lagering in bottle, the yeast reawakened and did its job.
Recently I'd fermented a kolsch with K-97, a German ale yeast for which lagering is recommended. I primed and bottled and carbonated half the batch after 10 days, half after 15 days (at @ 21C ).
With some other yeasts I've found 10 days did the job, but with K-97 the carbonation was incomplete. I shook and warmed those bottles for 5 more days, cooled and sampled. Way better than the 15-day bottles. No contest.
There are many questions to answer. I'm going to experiment soon with a dunkel and later with a pilsner, lagering riight after bottling and warming later. I'll report back on this thread.
My questions for now are, has anyone else done this, and is there maybe a name for it, like Gezundheitsscheissenwirtschaft? My Google searches just bring up the normal procedure.
A while back and on a whim I did this with two bottles of an Oktoberfest (S-189 lager yeast) and preferred them to the rest of the batch that was carbonated and then lagered in bottle. After two months lagering in bottle, the yeast reawakened and did its job.
Recently I'd fermented a kolsch with K-97, a German ale yeast for which lagering is recommended. I primed and bottled and carbonated half the batch after 10 days, half after 15 days (at @ 21C ).
With some other yeasts I've found 10 days did the job, but with K-97 the carbonation was incomplete. I shook and warmed those bottles for 5 more days, cooled and sampled. Way better than the 15-day bottles. No contest.
There are many questions to answer. I'm going to experiment soon with a dunkel and later with a pilsner, lagering riight after bottling and warming later. I'll report back on this thread.
My questions for now are, has anyone else done this, and is there maybe a name for it, like Gezundheitsscheissenwirtschaft? My Google searches just bring up the normal procedure.