Jakeedward
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- Jun 20, 2014
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I notice in the latest "How to Brew" edition (4th edition) it talks about slowly reducing the temperature to cold condition beer. Apparently (page 95) slowly cooling the beer instead of crashing "prevents thermal shock of the yeast cells and subsequent extraction of fatty acids and lipids" which can "interfere with head retention and will readily oxidise causing stale flavours".
On that page, it suggests cooling the beer by 2F (1C) per day. However, in the "How to Brew Lager Beer" section (page 174) it suggests cooling the beer by 10F (6C) per day. I can only assume that this difference means that ale should be reduced by 2F per day, and lager by 10F by day (although not sure why).
This seems to be in conflict with the suggestion in the very detailed "Yeast" book by Chris White and Jamil Zainasheff, where on page 114 it states that "crashing the temperature or lowering it slowly makes little flavour difference if you are lowering it to less than 40F (4C). Instead, it suggests that slow temp reduction is just a traditional lager conditioning technique that's not really used anymore where continual fermentation was desired at lower temps.
Does anyone know of any scientific studies that indicate whether slow temp reduction is actually beneficial/required? If not, it's a lot easier for me to crash. I currently crash both ale and lager to about 3C (37F), which takes about 2 days for ale (starting from diacetyl rest temp of 25C (77F)).
On that page, it suggests cooling the beer by 2F (1C) per day. However, in the "How to Brew Lager Beer" section (page 174) it suggests cooling the beer by 10F (6C) per day. I can only assume that this difference means that ale should be reduced by 2F per day, and lager by 10F by day (although not sure why).
This seems to be in conflict with the suggestion in the very detailed "Yeast" book by Chris White and Jamil Zainasheff, where on page 114 it states that "crashing the temperature or lowering it slowly makes little flavour difference if you are lowering it to less than 40F (4C). Instead, it suggests that slow temp reduction is just a traditional lager conditioning technique that's not really used anymore where continual fermentation was desired at lower temps.
Does anyone know of any scientific studies that indicate whether slow temp reduction is actually beneficial/required? If not, it's a lot easier for me to crash. I currently crash both ale and lager to about 3C (37F), which takes about 2 days for ale (starting from diacetyl rest temp of 25C (77F)).