so I made a doppelbock on xmas eve and pitched a big yeast cake of the white labs german bock yeast from my last batch of scharzbier. it spent day 1 at fermenting away at 50 degrees in my temp-controlled chest freezer. I decided to drop the ferm temp down to 45 to minimize ester production in this big beer. the problem is, I forgot that I had the heating blanket plugged into the temp controller (it's really cold in my garage - I live in Lake Tahoe) and it was set to heat, so my ferm temp ramped up to 70F! I just noticed it this morning (after about 16 hours) and immediately plugged the freezer back in so it's cooling down now and should be back at 45-50F within a few hours. All said and done, it will have gone from 50F to 70F and back to 50F in about 20-24 hours on day 2 of fermentation. My questions are: should I expect this yeast to all drop out and quit on me due to the temperature rollercoaster ride? should I pitch more fresh yeast? did I just produce a bunch of esters, sulfur and hot alcohols and ruin this beer? If so, will long-term cold lagering reduce/eliminate these off flavors?
I've been brewing ales for 14+ years but am new to lagering. I've heard that the german bock yeast is very tolerant of warmer temps...some even say they ferment with it a ale temps and don't have sulfur/ester issues. Anyone out there experienced hot flashes in lager fermentation?? Hoping I didn't ruin this beer...
Cheers, Kevin

