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Help with California Common...

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Nkliph

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Although not a true lager, this is the closest I've ever come to doing one. I fermented in primary, then primed and bottled. Read that a lager phase was a good idea, so I've kept bottles in fridge since bottling.

One week later, I tried one bottle, and there is virtually no carbonation. Usually when I test an ale at this point there is some degree of carbonation.

So, does lagering in bottles slow the carbonation phase, or do I need to take the bottles to room temp after lagering for a few weeks?
 
I would think that you have the bottles so far below the temp range of the yeast that it is dormant and can't do it's thing. I would put them in a 75 degree room for carbing.
 
The bottles will take a very long time to carbonate at refrigerated temperatures. You could leave them to "lager" if you want but will then need to carbonate them at near 70 degrees for about 3 weeks. I did a California Common and just treated it as an ale brewed with lager yeast. It came out fine.

The style was originated because the brewers could not achieve lager temperatures.
 
Yep, room temp is where you want it for conditioning. Lagering usually takes place at near freezing temps, which is too cold for conditioning.
 
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