As I understand thing lagering (or cold conditioning) is done to blend and smooth the flavours of the beer. But doesn't this happen anyway at non-lagering temps given enough time? Or does it happen 'better' at lagering temps?
The colder temperatures of lagering encourage solids to precipitate out of solution faster than at room temperature. Lagering really just means allowing impurities to drop out, giving you clearer, cleaner beer. You can achieve the exact same thing with filtering. I assure you, Budweiser doesn't just let their beer sit around in giant cold tanks for 4 weeks before packaging and shipping.They're grain-to-glass in a couple of weeks, thanks to filtering.
The problem is that the cold temperatures are required in order to get some of the compounds to actually form, so that they can precipitate out. For example, chill haze. If you never chill the beer, chill haze will never form, and will never fall out of solution. You have to cause it to form first (by chilling the beer), so that it can start to fall to the bottom.
That said, you can "lager" in the keg. Just package the beer as normal, put it in your keezer/kegerator, hook it up to CO2, and ... don't drink it for a while.
So in that case I could put 1 easy keg at a time in my domestic fridge for say a week to form any compouds that require cold temps (e.g. chill haze) then the remaining largering time would be at room temps (albeit for 2-3 months)?
Storing at room temperature is aging, not "lagering".
during lagering, things are happening that are not simply maturation/aging of the beer.
From braukaiser.com http://braukaiser.com/wiki/index.php?title=Fermenting_Lagers (excellent site for information!!!!!):
"When the beer is conditioned at low temperatures various processes take place that lead to the smooth character which is expected from a lager:
Proteins and polyphenols (tannins) form agglomerations (basically bind with each other to form larger molecules) which become insoluble and precipitate out of solution. [Nguyen 2007]
Hop polyphenols will drop out leading to milder hop bitterness
Yeast sediment which cleans up the beer and removes the yeasty smell and taste associated with young beer
Some of the alcohols and acids form esters in the beer which leads to new flavor compounds. This process is very slow and becomes only significant after more than 12 weeks [Narziss 2005].
Some yeast activity may be present which leads to further clean-up and extract reduction of the beer. I oftentimes see another extract drop of 0.1 - 0.2 Plato over the course of a few weeks."
The problem is that if you chill the keg and lager it for a couple of weeks, yes, things will fall out of solution and it will clear up. But when you move the keg to take it back out, you're going to disturb that sediment and mix a lot of them back into solution.
Lagering at room temperature doesn't really do anything. I suppose it will help clarity a little bit, as the yeast settle out, but there's really not much point to just sitting a keg in the corner of your basement for 3 months. Again, even if things settle out, they're going to get mixed back up again as soon as you move the keg back into a fridge.
To really benefit from lagering, you need to either rack the beer to another container after having let it sit at cold temperatures for weeks, or not disturb the keg once it's undergone lagering.
Mini kegs might work too, but if all you have now are bottles, it works well. I do it that way, since I can't lager in a secondary.
Check out the Brulosopher method for fast lagering:As I understand thing lagering (or cold conditioning) is done to blend and smooth the flavours of the beer. But doesn't this happen anyway at non-lagering temps given enough time? Or does it happen 'better' at lagering temps?