stpug
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These also have more sediment than my normal beers, and I do not know why...I only slightly disturbed the trub while siphoning.
It sounds as though you may have had a renewed fermentation after bottling. You had mentioned that your FG was higher than expected (1.020), and that you had bottled with 5 oz priming sugar for 5 gallons (IIRC). The priming sugar rate would have given you well\high carbonated beers, but not gushers. It's possible that the introduction of oxygen and little bit of rousing caused by bottling may have got the yeast going again. One way of checking would be to take another FG reading on one of your beers. The priming sugar may skew the reading a little bit but I'm sure we could figure out the numbers. Probably the easiest way to take another reading would be to first chill a beer so it doesn't gush; then pour into a thin-walled container (glass coffee pot maybe); then submerge the container in hot water for an hour or so (you're aiming for warm beer; 85F maybe); stir occasionally throughout the hour to encourage the release of co2 from solution; when you feel the beer is warm (not hot) and the co2 has been mostly released then chill the beer back to ~60F using an ice-water bath; once you're at 60F then pour into your hydrometer tube and take another reading. While this won't fix your overcarbonated problem, it may tell you if fermentation was renewed in the bottle on the original beer sugars.