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Hi LM55
All seems good with the calendar and cant see any drastic problems appearing.
when I am brewing Hammer Of Thaw I tend to brew at around the 16 - 18 Degree mark and follow the instructions like obviously you are.
I don't bother to rack of as I don't see the point, but this Lager is quite a high gravity lager which will take a lot of time to condition.
I left mine for 9 months conditioning the same with the Bad Cat Beer from the same manufacturer and it started tasting good from the 9 month.
If you can leave it any longer then all well and good but it is certainly drinkable from the 9 month.
The reason for its long condition is because of its high gravity.
I hope this has cleared up any areas you were unsure of .
Please keep us all informed on how you get on with it.
Incidently this is going to be my next beer of which I am going to put on in time for xmas .
Good Luck
Big D 2657
Wow you have patience to wait 9 months for a beer! I read somewhere that the rule of thumb was one week per percent point. Normally, if I can keep my hands off them I ferment for three weeks, leave in the bottling bucket for a week, warm condition for two weeks and drink after four in the garage. Over time you will lose the hop profile in hop forward beers, at least the aroma, so six weeks in the bottle is good. However, with Belgium beers a good few months is supposed to be the best for them and for Christmas ales with complex ingredients then these can condition for a long time. In Greg Hughes book he has a Belgium red ale that conditions for a year but that would never last in my house :smile: most of my beers push 6-7% and I find that three months from fermentation they are good to go.