
jamilz wrote:I let this sit for 4 weeks. No racking, no secondary, no D rest. After 4 weeks, I have a flawless lager, which I rack to a keg and carbonate. It is pretty much ready to drink at that point.


jamilz wrote:I've never heard of anybody cooling down their beer and calling it a diacetyl rest.

jamilz wrote:Me, I pitch cold (like GB) around 43F to 44F. Then I let the beer warm up to 48F to 50F though the natural heat of fermentation. Of course, you need to pitch the right amount of yeast for this to work. I let this sit for 4 weeks. No racking, no secondary, no D rest. After 4 weeks, I have a flawless lager, which I rack to a keg and carbonate. It is pretty much ready to drink at that point.
If it is a big lager, like a bock, it generally goes up to 6 weeks of fermentation.

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