Heh. So I'll have to list all the 'do nots' on this list next time I want to make a big smelly wondrous estery beer. So, pitch yeast while wort is still a bit warm, above 21 degrees, and try to keep wort around that temp for a day or so....
Apparently another influence in big ester production is open fermentation. If you do this the yeast will happily throw up heaps more esters, apparently, than if you'd closed the fermenter up. (I saw this on an episode of Brewing TV dealing with open fermentaiton). A month or so ago I tried an open fermentation experiment of my own, with a saison I was brewing (well, two saisons, but I was fermenting them as one batch to start with and splitting them up later at secondary ferment). For a day the house filled with the most wonderful bready aromas, and after that things started getting a bit more.... weird. Sulfury smells, for instance. Closed up the fermenter after, I think, two days, but it was perfectly safe up to that point since the blanket of gasses and krausen formed protected the brew from most outside infections. They're all bottled and mature now, and I think turned out quite well.