Hockeyhunter99
Well-Known Member
It's not a myth. Many veteran brewers leave their beers in the fermenter for 3-4 weeks for this very reason. Not sure if you're familiar with Homebrew42 and Vikeman over on BeerAdvocate. But they condone this method and I'm pretty sure they're not messing up (pitch rate, yeast health, temperature control . . .)
Anyway, the whole point of my initial post was to say that cold crashing is generally unnecessary for ales with high flocculating yeast. After 2 weeks, you should have a very clear beer. A huge majority of the yeast will drop out of suspension (the whole point of cold crashing by the way). At this point, it's not going to get much clearer.
And i am sure these guys don't mess up too often either.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f13/aging-beer-facts-myths-discussion-84005/
i am with AnOldUR. Great beer can be done in less than three weeks and in as little as two. i took Oktoberfest Champion Brewer with a beer 14 days old. as the post states, it all goes back to good yeast pitch.