Bugeater wrote:As you have guessed, there are conflicting opinions about the need for a protein rest. A protein rest will reduce haze, but if you overdo it, you will lose head retention. If you are comfortable doing step mashing and can quickly raise the temperature from one step level to the next then do it. If not, then skip it. Being your first lager, I would skip it and work on getting the rest of the process down first. I would be more concerned about the length of the boil. Diacetyl is a big concern when using pilsner malt. A 90 minute boil is normally recommended to get rid of the precursors.
Wayne

grainman wrote:Should I expect to use a blowoff tube or will a normal airlock be ok for this? I suspect fermentation will go slow enough not to need a blowoff tube, but not really sure.

Elbone wrote:grainman wrote:Should I expect to use a blowoff tube or will a normal airlock be ok for this? I suspect fermentation will go slow enough not to need a blowoff tube, but not really sure.
Never had a lager blow off. They're well-behaved ferments.
Bugeater wrote:As you have guessed, there are conflicting opinions about the need for a protein rest. A protein rest will reduce haze, but if you overdo it, you will lose head retention. If you are comfortable doing step mashing and can quickly raise the temperature from one step level to the next then do it. If not, then skip it. Being your first lager, I would skip it and work on getting the rest of the process down first. I would be more concerned about the length of the boil. Diacetyl is a big concern when using pilsner malt. A 90 minute boil is normally recommended to get rid of the precursors.
Wayne
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