Been thinking about this and while I'd credit your technical brewing knowledge as being leaps above my own there's a couple of things that have confused me.
Why would you rack early in the growth phase? Surely that's interfering with the cell count just as it's getting moving. What would be the advantage?
-Sorry, what i was implying if you ahve a conical fermenter, at the point of passing growth phase and into fermentation its common practice to dump the break/turb material from your conical fermenter. What i mean is, once you begin to see krausen and growth period has completed (ales 16-24 hours) you transfer your wort to a secondary container, leaving the cold break material behind.
To my mind racking for secondary fermentation and racking for clarity are two different things so racking post ferment is for a different purpose.
-Yes, that is correct. Which is why secondary for my above comment is at the point of getting off the break material.
Also the yeast during the secondary phase that is doing the work is generally in suspension -
the stuff you rack off and leave behind is mainly inactive or dead yeast as far as I'm aware so is racking 3/4 through really going to affect your cell count?
- If you have had issues with unstable temperatures and excessive yeast flocculation, it can be a big issue racking this late into fermentation. Take Wyeast 1968 ESB as an example, that stuff floccs out at the drop of a hat. If not handled correctly and kept at correct stable temperatures you will have diacetyl and a whole world of other fermentation pre-cursors in your beer, then if you rack, you might struggle to get rid of them. With yeats like US05 and other moderate flocculation yeasts you are usually pretty safe. So yes, what you're saying is correct, cell counts are not much of an issue if your fermentation has been stable and there has not been any excessive flocculation during fermentation. It can be a risky process as i have outlined.
Again I've never noticed any phenolics or esters that I could attribute to the process of racking and generally the ferment seems to continue afterwards (and considering it's a recommended solution to stalled ferment as a way of rousing yeast it makes sense that it would.
- This is only attributed to flocculation issues as noted above, if you are lacking cell counts at the point of racking, you will struggle to rid your beer of these notes. If you have it still in primary, you can rouse the whole fermenter and knock them off.
Still keen to do the side by side. I've noticed a definite taste difference in my beers after I started racking but there's too many variables as when I started doing that I also started cold conditioning, moving away from kits and into extracts, hops spec grains and finally partial and AG). There's also admittedly no way of telling if that difference is the same difference that racking simply for clarity
(sediment affects flavour to my mind regardless of how many people suggest it's cosmetic).
- Do a side by side with the same beer and same pitching rates, given time for both of them to age and floc out, i'd doubt you could taste the difference (or moreso what one was racked) with a blind triangle tasteoff. Yes, i agree (its not your mind, its your tongue ). Sediment does attribute taste, protien and yeast have a flavour. Sediment also harbours tannins and hop resins, which is why your beer is 'mellower' once it drops bright.