I did a Cali Common a while back that took a while to start (as opposed to ale yeast) and I noticed the same thing with this one. I used a 2L starter which I made about a week ago, and after decanting pitched cold into 60d wort. I aerated with O2 for 1 min. I had positive pressure after about 6 hours and as of this morning - it's going pretty slow. Temp has remained steady at 60.
Does lager yeast take longer than ale yeast to 'get going'?
Based on my notes, the beer tasted great after secondary going into the keg. My sanitation is anal so I don't believe it's infection but I remember that I had picked up diaceytel after about a week after kegging. I brought it to Lyn who confirmed my findings. Someone had mentioned 'late bloom' diacetyl and I thought that might have been it but I really wasn't sure.
I found this on another website regarding diacetyl.
I don't think this would apply to me since I did not detect it after secondary but perhaps it was more noticable and I just missed it after carbonation.How can you tell if the diacetyl rest is complete? There's an easy “forcing” test that will only cost you a few ounces of beer. Pull a sample from your fermenter and split it into two covered containers. Refrigerate one and heat the other to 140°F for an hour, then taste them both. If they taste the same, you're ready to rack your beer out of the fermenter. If you can taste butter in the heated sample, your yeast is still at work, and you should give it another day or two.
So this time around, I'm wondering if a D rest would be beneficial? At 60d, I wouldn't think one would be necessary but if it doesn't hurt, I may try it. I may also try the trick above but this seems to be a chore to have to do each time I brew using lager yeast.
Any thoughts?