#1 - Vale71 is right on target here, letting the yeast clean up after itself is a homebrew myth in my opinion. There are reasons for keeping yeast alive and around which are related to fermentation and carbonation. The main point being dead or dormant yeast cells do not do anything. So once the fermentable food runs out in your beer the yeast literally drop out of the picture. Whatever cleanup they do, they do as they are eating and active. So leaving beer in the primary for a month does not accomplish much other than more time for everything to drop out.
It is such a simple concept that it gets overlooked. The most important thing about aging is gravity causing all of the "stuff" to drop out of the beer. Seriously. That's pretty much what lagering is - colder temps speed up the dropping out of "stuff" to the bottom of the vessel which gets left behind.
I have always noticed when I drink a beer young and it is not totally clear that the flavor is kind of muddy. Once it drops bright the flavors are more defined and the beer tastes a lot better. Very simple and not magic from the yeast.
#2 - Spunding. This is where you transfer fermenting beer with about 1 Plato left in fermentation to capture the CO2. This is a way to naturally carbonate your beer. The spunding valve is a device that lets you set what pressure to hold and everything above that gets released. So when I spund I transfer from my primary into a keg, put the spunding valve on and let the beer finish in the keg. When I go to serve or lager the beer it gets put in the fridge and is ready to go with carbonation.
This is where the slow cold crash comes into effect as you do not want to put your yeast to sleep if you still want them to ferment and create CO2 for carbonation.
#3 - Starters. I pressure can 1.070 wort in mason jars. When I make a starter I add a bottled water amount to make a 2 liter starter. For ales I will make the night before and pitch the entire thing at high krausen. For lagers I let it ferment out, put in the fridge, siphon off and then add another 2L of wort and repeat the siphon routine. The best case scenario is to double the size of the second starter (4L) but I do not think I can put 4L in my starter container. Anyway, this is with one yeast pack to begin with. After all of this, I am still under the best case scenario for lager pitch rates. But I do not want to buy multiple packs so my ferment goes a bit longer.
Hope this helps!
It is such a simple concept that it gets overlooked. The most important thing about aging is gravity causing all of the "stuff" to drop out of the beer. Seriously. That's pretty much what lagering is - colder temps speed up the dropping out of "stuff" to the bottom of the vessel which gets left behind.
I have always noticed when I drink a beer young and it is not totally clear that the flavor is kind of muddy. Once it drops bright the flavors are more defined and the beer tastes a lot better. Very simple and not magic from the yeast.
#2 - Spunding. This is where you transfer fermenting beer with about 1 Plato left in fermentation to capture the CO2. This is a way to naturally carbonate your beer. The spunding valve is a device that lets you set what pressure to hold and everything above that gets released. So when I spund I transfer from my primary into a keg, put the spunding valve on and let the beer finish in the keg. When I go to serve or lager the beer it gets put in the fridge and is ready to go with carbonation.
This is where the slow cold crash comes into effect as you do not want to put your yeast to sleep if you still want them to ferment and create CO2 for carbonation.
#3 - Starters. I pressure can 1.070 wort in mason jars. When I make a starter I add a bottled water amount to make a 2 liter starter. For ales I will make the night before and pitch the entire thing at high krausen. For lagers I let it ferment out, put in the fridge, siphon off and then add another 2L of wort and repeat the siphon routine. The best case scenario is to double the size of the second starter (4L) but I do not think I can put 4L in my starter container. Anyway, this is with one yeast pack to begin with. After all of this, I am still under the best case scenario for lager pitch rates. But I do not want to buy multiple packs so my ferment goes a bit longer.
Hope this helps!