You could try a cream ale with us-05 (around 62-64). It should come out pretty clean. You could also try Nottingham (around 57-59) for a clean ferment as well. If you can ferment around 55-60 you could also try using a kolsch yeast as well. These will all be clean ales, but still not as clean as a lager.
If you're going to make a pseudo-lager by fermenting with ale yeast in the 50s, that means you probably have temperature control....which begs the question:
Why don't you just use lager yeast?
To the OP, without temp control your best bet for a clean beer is US-05.
There is more than one kind of Kolsch yeast. WLP029 is from Fruh, and I would ferment that one in the mid 60's. Don't try to go down to the 50's. The brewers at Fruh also agree:
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f13/how-brew-frueh-koelsch-brewmaster-54080/
Wyeast 2565 is a completely different strain (from the Paffgen brewery, i believe), and that one will go down to the mid 50's no sweat.
I can't speak for the OP but while I do have active temp control via a son of ferementor build I can't go much below the mid-50s and have no capability to ramp down to the 30s for extended lagering.
I've thought about just bottling a lager after primary, carbing, and then cold condition the bottles in the fridge for an extended period, but I don't really have the fridge space to cold condition a full batch anyway. We've only got one fridge and it's normally packed to the brim with foodstuffs.
I'm not really chasing psuedo-lagers that hard, because I know that the only way to really get a lager is to brew one, but I am curious to how close I can get with what I have and how clean a fermentation I can coax from an ale yeast.
Although not ideal, I have found ways to ferment and lager in my Son of Fermentation chamber. Mainly just load the main chamber with ice (or frozen jugs) and you can get it down there. Like I said though, not ideal. Might be less headache to just go with a psuedo lager.
Hey guys, rookie question. I'm four batches in. My wife enjoys lagers like Boston Lager and Yeungling. Is there anyway to produce something similar with ale yeast; I'm not equipped for lagering.
Hey guys, rookie question. I'm four batches in. My wife enjoys lagers like Boston Lager and Yeungling. Is there anyway to produce something similar with ale yeast; I'm not equipped for lagering.
i also lagered in my SOFC. five days @ 52F swapping one gallon of ice per day. After that I bumped it up to mid 60s. It turned out really well, though I've moved onto using a dedicated fridge now.Although not ideal, I have found ways to ferment and lager in my Son of Fermentation chamber. Mainly just load the main chamber with ice (or frozen jugs) and you can get it down there. Like I said though, not ideal. Might be less headache to just go with a psuedo lager.
I posted this in another thread about low temp ale yeast but I thought I'd post this here too.
I've been tracking my Faux Pilsner with Notty for the last six days. I pitched 1 packet of Notty into 2.75 gallons of 1.050 wort and held 55 for the first 2.5 days. Then I raised it about 2 degrees a day.
48 hours - 50% attenuation
60 hours - raised to 56.5 F
72 hours - 65.5% attenuation
84 hours - started raising to 60 F slowly
6 days - 80% attenuation
I'm going to let it sit for a little before packaging, but Notty did the job once again. I am a fan of ramping temperatures towards the end of active fermentation, but this brew was held below the 57 degree lower bound of Notty until at least 70% attenuation. It was slower than a normal Notty ferment, but not be an extreme margin. I had krausen within 12 hours pitching at 55F. Depending on how many cells you believe are in a rehyrdrated pack of Notty, I pitched somewhere between 13% and 100% more yeast that needed for a .75M cells/mL/Plato pitch rate.
The few drops from my rest of my refractometer pipette sample where clean tasting and hoppy. Hard to get a feel for taste off a 2 mL sample but I think this is going very well.
Other thoughts, I didn't really pick up any fruity ale flavors, but again, it's early and tough to get a true impression of taste off of suck a small sample. Oh, and these are beer temperatures, not ambient.
Do you usually take that many samples from your beer before its even a week old? Or was this an experiment to track how the yeast performed when cold?