Ok, so I started a honey lager a couple weeks ago and a few days ago bottled them and tossed them in the fridge. Because I didn't have a good place to let things sit and ferment at ideal temperatures, I used a high temperature lager yeast (Wyeast 2112), which has ideal temperatures between 65-72F.
My question is: now that I have bottles in the fridge (nice and cold), will they still carb up? I'm curious about it since the yeast seemed to be active in warmer temperatures if I should let the bottles sit out for a week first to carb up and THEN put into the fridge to lager, or if I'd be ok just setting them in the fridge for lagering.
Another way of asking my questions would be, if 4 weeks from now (what the recipe specifies for the lagering period) the beer isn't carbed up, and I have to let it sit at warmer temps to carbonate, am I gonna have to restart the lagering process all over or should it be good to go from there?
I'm not really familiar with what changes happen inside the beer during lagering/carbonation...
My question is: now that I have bottles in the fridge (nice and cold), will they still carb up? I'm curious about it since the yeast seemed to be active in warmer temperatures if I should let the bottles sit out for a week first to carb up and THEN put into the fridge to lager, or if I'd be ok just setting them in the fridge for lagering.
Another way of asking my questions would be, if 4 weeks from now (what the recipe specifies for the lagering period) the beer isn't carbed up, and I have to let it sit at warmer temps to carbonate, am I gonna have to restart the lagering process all over or should it be good to go from there?
I'm not really familiar with what changes happen inside the beer during lagering/carbonation...