Hello all,
I brewed a lager recently and was cold conditioning the bottled beer in a small fridge. Being slightly slow on the complexities of refrigeration mechanics, I turned it down too low and the beer froze in the bottles. They had been primed and bottled 10 days earlier.
I used Saflager 34/70 yeast.
Have I ruined the beer? Heaven help me if that tragedy occurred.
Thanks,
David.
My lager has frozen
My lager has frozen
I have never exploded. But, I know what it would be like. Don't ask me how, I just know. I've always, just known. - Garth Marenghi
-
- Posts: 199
- Joined: Wednesday Oct 25, 2006 1:18 pm
- Location: sydney
-
- Posts: 789
- Joined: Friday Nov 24, 2006 5:07 pm
- Location: Collingwood, Australia
This is kind of off topic slightly, but....
I have this Dutch Lager that was fairly dismal, with a very, very yeasty taste. Anyway, I turned my fridge down a little bit each day, until it was almost freezing. Hey presto! This beer now tastes like liquid gold!! No yeasty taste or smell.
Can anyone explain this phenomenon? (It's probably something really simple, but this has never happened to me before.)
P.S. I now really regret ramming heaps of this brew down my throat, in order to get onto my next one as quickly as possible...
I have this Dutch Lager that was fairly dismal, with a very, very yeasty taste. Anyway, I turned my fridge down a little bit each day, until it was almost freezing. Hey presto! This beer now tastes like liquid gold!! No yeasty taste or smell.
Can anyone explain this phenomenon? (It's probably something really simple, but this has never happened to me before.)
P.S. I now really regret ramming heaps of this brew down my throat, in order to get onto my next one as quickly as possible...

<a href="http://www.mybannermaker.com" target="_blank"><img src="http://tinyurl.com/yytbuc"></a>