TANSTAAFB
Well-Known Member
I didn't read all responses - not enough time - but one thing you didn't mention in your post is raising the temperature at the end for the purposes of increasing attenuation. I apologize if this has already been discussed, as it's not exactly ground-breaking stuff, but it's such a damn useful (and in my opinion, important) technique that I figured I'd mention it anyways, just in case.
When I'm going for a really dry beer, I'll try to knock another few gravity points off by increasing the temp by 1-2°F per day, sometimes up to the low-mid 80's - and in rare and extreme cases, the high 80's and even low 90's! At this point, the yeast is really doing such a marginal amount of work that any off-flavors potentially produced will be absolutely negligible (most of the time, if timed right), and yet that added bit of dryness will noticeably enhance the character of the beer. Seems like a no-brainer to me if you're working with a style that benefits from high attenuation.
Then I'll often cold-condition it. And although I'm fairly sure it should at least have some small effects on flavor in addition to (and largely because of) the yeast dropping to the bottom and clearing the beer up, I'm not nearly as confident that it will have a noticeably positive effect as I am about raising temps to further dry out a beer. So I wouldn't mind seeing your conclusions.
I do this all the time with my Belgians. My dubbel showed signs of active fermentation for 14 days with a good pitch of 550 as I kept bumping the temps when it showed signs of slowing down! I always raise temps a little at the end of fermentation to allow the yeast to clean up, but it is still in a controlled environment.
I am talking about taking a beer that is 1-2 weeks under temp control and moving it into a room where the temps can swing considerably over the course of the day and even more over the course of 2-4 more weeks on the cake. I also bottle condition at room temp (in the same room I will be moving my fermenters to) and they carb quickly and come out clean...not concerned with moderate temperature fluctuation during bottle conditioning but during bulk conditioning.