Yes I agree that your pitching temp was too high, I'm assuming that the dry yeast was S05 and that yeast doesn't like temps that high.
Is your off flavor an alcohol or heat flavor?
I wouldn't worry about getting trub in your fermenter, that will all settle out.
Can you tell more about your process? Do you know what your temp was during fermentation?
Thanks for the response Transam.
The first batch was Nottingham and the second was S05.
No not alcohol or heat. More like bitter, but odd. Some what similar to green beer, but it's (the second batch) been in the bottle for around 6 weeks now.
OK, I thought that was OK to do with the trub. I've been paying close attention now that I'm a few batches in.
---First batch (5gal intended batch size) Process:
Boiled 2 gal of
distilled water (found out distilled water is not preferred, unless adding minerals for a specific style)
Added this to sanitized fermenter bucket at about 170F-180F to let it cool.
Started heating 3 gal of water for steeping grain and LME/DME.
In second pot placed LME container in hot water and applied heat to allow easy poor of LME.
Added steeping grain to water around 165F, turned off heat and monitored temp for the 20min steep.
Brought 3 gal to a boil and added DME and LME to boil with burner off to prevent scorching, stirred for about 5 min, applied heat, added hops, brought to boil. (LME was around 120-125F, I was having a hard time holding onto the container due to temp, hops added before wort was boiling, could have been an issue, thoughts?)
Boiled for 60 min, placed kettle in ice bath to chill.
Added roughly 2.5 gal of wort to fermenter with previous 2 gal of boiled water.
OG was 1.054 as expected.
Pitched yeast at 80-85F.
Fermented for two weeks at room temp (70-75F could be warmer during the day), racked to bottling bucket with 5 oz corn sugar, tasted after two weeks in the bottle and a few weeks after. It tasted the same regardless of time.
Batch was a little short of 5 gal close to 4.5.
---End first batch
---Second batch (5gal intended batch size) Process:
Boiled 2 gal of brita filtered tap water.
Added this to sanitized fermenter bucket at about 170F-180F to let it cool.
Started heating 3 gal of water for steeping grain and LME/DME.
In second pot placed LME container in hot water and applied heat to allow easy poor of LME.
Added steeping grain to water around 165F, turned off heat and monitored temp for the 20min steep.
Brought 3 gal to a boil and added DME and LME to boil with burner off to prevent scorching, stirred for about 5 min, applied heat, brought to boil, added hops to boil. (LME was around 120-125F again, I was having a hard time holding onto the container due to temp, hops added after wort was boiling, thoughts?)
Boiled for 60 min, placed kettle in ice bath to chill.
Added roughly 2.5 gal of wort to fermenter with previous 2 gal of boiled water.
Didn't take good notes on this one not sure of the OG but I know it was with in 2-3 point of expected OG.
Pitched yeast at 80-85F again.
Fermented for two weeks 2 at room temp (70-75F could be warmer during the day), racked to bottling bucket with 5 oz corn sugar, tasted after two weeks in the bottle and few weeks after. I still have a few bottles from this batch left so I can sample again to try and figure out this odd flavor.
Batch was right at 5 gals as intended.
---End Second batch
Both batches are drinkable when consumed with spaghetti or pizza. (something acidic)
I prefer to have beer by itself.
I started to think about my processes today. Is there any chance I'm leaching flavors form the LME containers (plastic) when heating them prior to use?
What about adding hops too soon to non-rolling boil?
I'm in full agreement the yeast was pitched to hot. I now have a wort chiller to solve this problem.
My second batch overall was a blueberry saison which turned out REALLY well. (Second amber ale was my third batch overall) Too bad I only made a 3 gal batch of the BB Saison.

I pitched the yeast at 80-85 as well with this batch. I know, different yeast and ingredients. Plus saison yeast likes higher temps.
I hope that's enough information.
Thanks again for the response!