Sun Apr 04, 2010 9:23 am
If it's bacterial it won't be subtle. This used to be called Sarcina Sickness. And yes, if it's Sarcina Sickness, you are screwed.
I used to pitch cold and then warm up to 48 - 50 for lager fermentation but now I just pitch at whatever temp the wort comes out of the heat exchanger (usually around 50 - 52) with the controller set at about 48°F. I do this not because I don't like the cold pitch scheme but because I pitch inline now. I do not do diacetyl rests and do not, AFAIK, have diacetyl problems. At least no one has reported them to me. I stopped checking for it because it is a PITA determination and I always got results right around the minimum level of detection for the test. It, of course, strain dependent to some extent.
It is also, perhaps unfortunately, a fact of life that as beer ages its diacetyl level increases (after having decreased during lagering). I have not experienced this either but my beer is stored, for the long term, over yeast so they may keep re-processing it even after as much as a year. I am noticing that a Pils done with the Budvar strain is now, after more than a year, beginning to taste very much (more than it did) like Budvar and part of the Budvar profile depends on diacetyl right around the threshold level (makes the beer taste caramelly) so perhaps in this case (extra long storage) I may be seeing diacetyl upswing. Perhaps the yeast have finally given up the ghost but I haven't detected autolysis (yet). Unfortunately, the next mug of that beer could very well be the last - it's got to be about finished by now.