The carafoam makes sense, but the dark Munich, could they be using that for color and/or breadiness? Also, what about using just Vienna as the base malt?
Every malt visible was Weyermann.
The closest visible racks held Munich II in big totes. Then carafoam in totes. Further away, back by the cans was Weyermann Vienna sacks. There's considerably more behind that, but you can't see it, but it still looked like Weyermann brand malts.
I still think they use Rahr 2-row/Pale and carafoam/crystal (the malts I saw are on the opposite side of the brewery from where they mash, I'm sure there's more storage elsewhere), in most of their beers spiced with some combo of specialty malts.
SRM of Julius and Green (slightly lighter to my eye than Julius) doesn't allow for much Munich but both seemed slightly more complicated than just 2-row.
Didn't get bubblegum in either beer. Really tried to find it. But I do get that weird thing in the finish that I mentioned before, it was definitely there in both beers.
When I got home, took another taste of my (still carbing) beer. Similar finishing yeast taste and the bubbles.... Very interesting.
BSG on Munich II:
"It produces robust malt characteristics, including full body, deep amber color, and smooth mouthfeel. The flavor is strongly malty and the rich aroma has notes of caramel, honey, and bread."
https://bsgcraftbrewing.com/weyermann-munich-dk-type2-25kg
BSG on Vienna:
"It produces full-bodied beers with golden color and smooth mouthfeel. The flavor is malty-sweet with gentle notes of honey, almond, and hazelnut"
https://bsgcraftbrewing.com/weyermann-vienna-25-kg