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ale guy wants to make lager

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badmajon

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I'm an AG ale guy who'd like to make a lager, how do I do it? Can anyone point me to a good FAQ or instructions?

I know I'll need a fridge, which works out since I'm buying a full size one for a kegerator and I'll have some extra space in there. Aside from that, I have no idea what the difference is in technique.
 
None, except how you ferment and age it. There are some good lagering posts in the forum, run a search and you will get plenty of reading material. Not rocket science, Lagers are more about patience and having the temp controlled place to ferment and store it.
 
The kegerator might work for lagering (35-40 degrees), but how do you plan to keep the fermentation cool (lagers are typically fermented at 50-55 degrees F, IIRC)?
 
Except for needing to ferment at 50 degrees, and needing a much bigger yeast starter, it's about the same as making an ale.

I don't know of any traditional kegerator/fridges that you could use without a temperature controller, though. My kegerator is at 39 degrees, and lagers generally ferment at 48-53. Many people use a separate temperature controller, because most fridges don't get that warm. That's the trickiest part of lager-making.
 
I find the biggest difference is patience (When done correctly) what with all the waiting for fermentation to finish, resting for diacetyl, and ultimately lagering/conditioning. But a good lager is definately worth it.
 
Except for needing to ferment at 50 degrees, and needing a much bigger yeast starter, it's about the same as making an ale.

I don't know of any traditional kegerator/fridges that you could use without a temperature controller, though. My kegerator is at 39 degrees, and lagers generally ferment at 48-53. Many people use a separate temperature controller, because most fridges don't get that warm. That's the trickiest part of lager-making.

We don't have a controller on our kegerator and it is at 47F right now with a dark spruce lager (Schwarzbier?) in it, has been fermenting for over a month using the danstar lager yeast. Krausen is starting to drop finally, it's not ideal but it's working. We planned on making this a "cold" lager, so after a rest at 68F we will lager for months around 34F, etc.:rockin:
 
Don't blindly follow the recommendations to ferment 2 weeks. Use your gravity readings and do your D-rest at .007 before fermentation is complete. I usually hit that point at the 6-10 day point.
 

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