Im going to bank on the huge (highly active) yeast pitches (5-gallon minimum) as a big part of the equation. Think about how fast fermentation is when you toss fresh wort onto a yeast cake that just got racked off.
The other thing is the infusion of O2 into the line as the beer is transferred from kettle to fermenter (post heat exchanger).
Now
about 10-12 days into the fermentation, turn that magic dial on your fermenter down to 30 degrees and let sit for 4-5 more days. Transfer to a secondary with a carbing stone on the bottom and take
not 10 days
but 2-3 hours to finish bringing the carb levels up.
Seems that all of the Home Brew factors that require extensive time have been dealt with:
- Fermentation can take up to 48 hours to begin and up to a week to complete the fermention (Not if youre oxygenating the wort effectively and pitching huge amounts of active yeast. Plus theres no wake up time-lag for this yeast)
- Yeast need time to clean up after themselves (Pitching super sized batches of highly active yeast would shorten this period down considerably)
- Takes time for beer to clear (I believe these large conicals they use contribute to speedier fermentations and yeast fall out. Add to that the 30 degree crash chill and the whirlfloc they add to the boil)
- Priming or force carbing beer takes days
weeks (by partially carbing the beer through pressurizing the fermenters
85% of the carbonation is completed during the fermentation stage. Using a carb stone in the 30 degree bright tank translates to hours instead of days to carbonate.
- Big beers need months to mature (This is not a big beer brewery. The biggest they have is probably their Goats Breath Bock at 6.5% or Smoked Porter at 5.5%)
It should be noted that their Smoked Porter won a Gold Medal in 2004 at the Great American Beer Festival and their wheat took Bronze in 2005.