First time doing a true lager

OK, we finally bit the bullet and figured we’d give this a try.  Brewing a Classic Pilsner.  OG was 1.57 and my target FG was 1.014.

After three weeks in primary at 53 degrees, we were down to 1.028, so I figured time to the diacytel rest, raised the temperature to 62, two days later down to 1.018.  Last night we transferred to corny for the lagering part of this process.  It’s now at 36 degrees, in a corny.  I purged the corny as I was filling, and left a little head pressure on.  No line is currently hooked up.

Over the next month, will I see any continued fermentation and hit that 1.014 number, or am I stuck with a slightly sweet lager?

I think you’re stuck there. The yeast won’t be working at 36F. Next time, make sure to aerate better and pitch more yeast. When you start to see fermentation slowing, raise the temp up to your diacetyl rest temp.

I’ve been playing with stepping temps up every couple days after fermentation starts. I think it eliminates the need for long lagering periods because the beer is clean going into the keg. It just needs to clear and it’s ready to drink.

Yup beat me to it…you are stuck with a sweet lager. This isn’t directed towards you but per say but I don’t understand why people ferment lagers(or ales for that matter) to a time frame and not to FG. ALWAYS ferment to FG regardless of time, a fast ferment test would tell you what that was. I would not have done the di rest at only half done either… next time try this…

2l starter, with plenty of 02
do fast ferment test (FFT)
Ferment until within 1-2plato (~4-8 gravity points) of FG from FFT
then di-rest to FG
Then keg/carbonate/lager

good luck

I’m too rookie to give you advice but for what its worth ive been having good success and getting lagers from 1.050 to 1.010. I’ve been told that the lions share of esters are produced in the growth stage. I start ramping my temp up a degree or two per day after the first 48hrs until I reach 62º and hold there till done. For me with 5 gallons that’s normally 2-3 weeks.

It’s only been at 36 over night.  If I raise it back up to 55 or so, would the yeast come back to life?  Or would that cause more problems than it would solve?

Pitch a lot of yeast, what Mrmalty or another calculator says. I pitch lower than fermentation temp and let it rise to the 48-50F target and maintain that. When 1-2 Plato above final, I do the D-rest, then if the sample is free of diacetyl, crash it to lagering temperature, -1C.

With big pitches, nutrients in the boil, and plenty of O2 I am crashing at about day 7 or before for a 1.050 + lager.

I concur my lagers follow close to that timeline as well.

A 1.085 Doppelbock will take around 9 days, maybe 10.

Is shaking enough or is compressed O2 essential?  I have a slow lager and I was worried about that because I don’t have forced O2 capability yet.

The BoPils I just brewed hit FG in 8 days. As mentioned, I pitched yeast per Mr Malty, used yeast nutrient, and oxygenated thoroughly.

Depends on the OG, but pure O2 can’t hurt, that’s for sure. A friend of mine has brewed some good lagers without using pure O2 in the 1.050-1.060 range and they attenuated as expected. But I prefer to use pure O2.

I used a mix stir on my recent one, until the foam hit the top of the bucket.  1.012 in 8 days.

I read I can’t remember where, that lagers require an optimal concentration that only pure o2 can provide.

I also use a Mix Stir, and do not fail to hit my final gravity on my lagers.

The word require can be subjective in the brewing world

You’re a wise man, Jim.  One of biggest issues at our club meetings is folks that claim to have the only way to do something.  There are many ways to a great pint of beer.  And even more to an average one.

Not true.

Or in the other words. This is a false statement.

Most lager yeast benefit from more O2. Not required, but the yeast will thank you.

Any yeast with more oxygen will have more growth.

If the wort still has fermentable sugars in it, you may be able to warm the beer back up and pitch an active starter of yeast to finish out the last few points.  You could even use a clean ale yeast like 1056 to do it.  I did this to clean up some diacetyl in an early lager of mine and it worked quite well.