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I would like to run a few brews back-to-back to build up a stock of beer. However, I would not be able to store all of the bottles in my house and would be forced to place them in the garage. My garage does not have any electricity and therefore no heating.

Do I need to protect my beer from freezing if the temperature gets to about -10°C (14°F)? And if so, what is the way to do this? Preferably without going out and buying a paraffin heater.

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I've frozen beer in kegs and thawed with no ill affects - they were stored outside in the Norwegian winter at -20C. If your bottles can tolerate freezing and not crack, is there some other reason why you don't want the beer to freeze? – mdma Jan 5 at 23:31

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On the few occasions I have had beer freezer it led to a permanent haze forming in the beers. Otherwise the beer was fine.

Without a power source even a well wrapped/insulated container of beer will lose its temp and get to the ambient -20 you describe.

You only option is to find a place inside or get power out there to the beer.

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At -10°C I think you will need some sort of heating element. If you don't have electricity, you could try doing it swamp cooler style.

  1. Put the bottles in an insulated container - an old refrigerator unplugged, a plastic cooler, or a DIY insulated box would all work (like a fermentation chamber). Put a thermometer in there to check on the temps.
  2. Put a heat source in the insulated container, some heated bottles of water (steel or aluminum bottles would be good since they're conductive) or bricks heated in the oven or something like that, swamp cooler style. Don't put the hot stuff too close to the bottles, you will want to avoid getting the beer hot.

This seems like a lot of work to me, because you'll have to heat the heating source manually with the stove or oven or something, so you're probably better off finding a closet to store them in. But this approach will work, as a well-insulated box will maintain temp pretty well for many hours, as long as you monitor it for a while and figure out how long your non-electric heat sources give you before it cools down.

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It would be interesting to know how long a fridge full of 20°C beer could stay above freezing with a single hot water bottle in there to give it a little extra heat. – Guy C Jan 14 at 23:26

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