Sorry - bit of a mouthful that title.
I finally cobbled together a ferm chamber from a fridge (currently holding my latest Saison at a pretty solid 70F) and was wondering about cold crashing my beer before bottling. I've read that thermal shocking for yeast occurs going from warm to cold, but cold to warm is fine and as I'm bottle conditioning I want to keep the yeast viable.
So given this, to cold crash a brew and keep the yeasts happy should I take a lager-like approach and cool it from 70 to 35 over a few days - say cooling by 5F per day - and then leave it at 35F for 24 hours? I'd then bottle as normal and put away in my usual conditioning space around 65F (and not back in the fridge at 35F, just to be clear) and let it warm up without concern.
Also, are there some beers that it's not desirable to cold crash? For example Witbiers, Weizenbock and Weissbier spring to mind where a cloudy aspect seems to be key to their style? (For example, the BJCP has for Witbier the appearance "will be very cloudy from starch haze and/or yeast, which gives it a milky, whitish-yellow appearance") Are there other styles that don't really benefit from a crash?
I finally cobbled together a ferm chamber from a fridge (currently holding my latest Saison at a pretty solid 70F) and was wondering about cold crashing my beer before bottling. I've read that thermal shocking for yeast occurs going from warm to cold, but cold to warm is fine and as I'm bottle conditioning I want to keep the yeast viable.
So given this, to cold crash a brew and keep the yeasts happy should I take a lager-like approach and cool it from 70 to 35 over a few days - say cooling by 5F per day - and then leave it at 35F for 24 hours? I'd then bottle as normal and put away in my usual conditioning space around 65F (and not back in the fridge at 35F, just to be clear) and let it warm up without concern.
Also, are there some beers that it's not desirable to cold crash? For example Witbiers, Weizenbock and Weissbier spring to mind where a cloudy aspect seems to be key to their style? (For example, the BJCP has for Witbier the appearance "will be very cloudy from starch haze and/or yeast, which gives it a milky, whitish-yellow appearance") Are there other styles that don't really benefit from a crash?