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Lager with no airlock

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mrmekon

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Joined
Jan 18, 2010
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Location
Stockholm, Sweden
So, as per my other thread, I accidentally pitched lager yeast instead of ale yeast in my SMaSH. I'm doing my best to stick to lager protocol, but I was not setup for this.

I just finished a diacetyl rest at 68F, brought it back down to 58F in the basement for 48 hours, then went to stick it in my mini-fridge and found out that it's too tall with the airlock attached!

My fermenter is a 1 gallon plastic orange juice jug. If I take gravity readings a couple of days apart and they aren't changing, would it be safe to take the airlock off and seal it with a cap while lagering? Or will it produce enough CO2 still to make a bottle bomb?

What are other solutions? A blow-off tube would work, but maybe a balloon would be good enough?
 
You can cap but loosen the cap to release pressure every few days. Better yet use a cork incase of increased pressure so it can pop out if it needs to.
 
You can cap but loosen the cap to release pressure every few days. Better yet use a cork incase of increased pressure so it can pop out if it needs to.

You could put some sanitized tin foil over the top with a rubber band around it. It'll let CO2 out and not much in. Works for starters. I don't really see it being a problem especially if the mini fridge is going to be left alone and not opened very 15 min like the one in the kitchen.
 
Ah hah, tin foil plus rubber band wins for easiest to do with materials on hand.

I know the big push with Ales is for skipping secondary. Is that any different with lagers? My racking cane is huge, for 5-gallon carboys, so I was planning on skipping it and just lagering in primary. I don't have fine-grained temperature control, though, so I am a little worried that the yeast will flocculate out. Would crashing it to 40F then transferring to secondary be better to re-suspend the yeast?
 
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