smitty8202
Well-Known Member
I hear a lot of people talking about cold crashing their brews. What is it and what are the advantages of doing it?
Cold crash 2 days then let temp rise back to seller temp then keg/bottle.
Really helps with clarity.
Any type will work, but it's not usually appropriate to do for naturally cloudy beers such as various wheats. It's not rocket science... it just takes advantage of the natural tendency of suspended particulate matter to settle in cold liquid. One minor bit of advice would be to cold crash the carboy in a location from which you don't need to move it when you package. That way you minimize any agitation of the settled junk on the bottom.
Why do you let temps rise back up before kegging/bottling?
I was told by a local brewery owner never to cold crash if you are bottling. You drop all the yeast out needed to carbonate. Any truth to this?
I don't remember but it's a common practice and there is some explanation out there.
You should buy Palmers "How to Brew"....lots of answers in there...online first edition is free too...Google that up and you can learn a whole bunch.
I have the current edition, and have read the whole thing, but I don't recall this info. I'll have to go do a search for it.
Did a search of the current edition, but no information on this was forthcoming. The closest thing was the paragraph on priming lagers: http://www.howtobrew.com/section1/chapter11-7.html which references that you may need to add some yeast back into super-clear lagers before bottling, and to culture/add the yeast at the same temperature to avoid thermal shock.
Definitely true, though I believe that the 'cleanup' phase would generally be completed before you cold-crash. I've been told by one of the experts here that the "yeast cleanup" phase is fairly fast, and that much of the improvement from a 1-2 month conditioning happens regardless of yeast being present.Hmmm. Maybe I got it from the book Yeast. It has something to with yeast cleaning up some of their own byproducts or something...
One thing to consider, if you are concerned about oxidation, is cold crashing in a keg. The decrease in temps in a fermenter will draw oxygen in. I normally rack to a Co2 purged keg, crash in the keezer overnight, then fine with gelatin. Yes the first pint or two need to be discarded but it's not a big deal to me.
I am confused about cold crashing and then raising the temperature back up, why would you raise the temperature back up?
...I am confused about cold crashing and then raising the temperature back up, why would you raise the temperature back up? I must have missed something in your previous statement....