After three years and a good number of AG brews I have just had to tip a whole batch away as it became infected (first time) so I'm looking for advice on what went wrong and why.
The problem hinges around using a new yeast I hadn't tried before, now before I say anything else I blame myself for this and not the supplier, I suspect that somewhere along the line I have done something wrong.
I bought a vial of Yorkshire No.1 on an agar slant from Brewlabs and decided to split the culture up into a number of bottles. Following the advice on here I used some frozen wort I had stored, re-boiled for ten minutes, cooled to below 25C and introduced the yeast (500ml of wort). Now here's the first thing that I should cough to, I had trouble controlling the temperature as at the time the room was too cold at about 15C; I was using a wine makers heat mat to stand the yeast on. Through my sloppiness the temperature went too high for 24 hours, it was in the high 20's like 27C, fermenting like mad and then I tried to bring the temp. down by moving the wort further and further off the mat till it dropped to low 20's. After a couple of days I cultured up again by adding a litre of wort (boiled and cooled) using a demi john this time and again it fermented well but with the temperature controlled better at around the 22c mark. I allowed to ferment out for 5 days then split and stored in 4 x 500ml bottles in the fridge.
So that's the yeast background, now the first brew I did using one worked but with problems and I posted on here about it in a previous thread. I had cultured up one of the bottles first with 500ml, then 1ltr before draining off the bulk of the wort and tasting it which was lovely I have to say, and used to brew a TT Landlord. It stopped at 1022 as I went to bottle at 10 days and found out after getting all my bottles ready lol. Anyway I roused by stirring gently so as not to introduce any air, put a thermostatic heater in to replace the large heat mat it was on to control the temp. better (why I didn't do this in the first place I don't know) and it slowly got going a krausen of an inch appeared and it finished off, taking a total of 3 weeks from beginning to end. I was glad it made it and the beer tastes fine and unfortunately is going all too fast

Now to the disaster, I used another bottle of starter culture, stepped it up using the same process using frozen wort, 500ml for 2 days, 1ltr for 4 days before adding to a new brew (black sheep ale) using the thermostatic heater I took readings each day and was satisfied it stayed at 22C daily which I checked for about a week. At 2 weeks I took a SG reading to find it had stopped at 1022 as in the previous brew, the head had all but gone, it tasted fine with no off flavours but I noted a slightly stale or acidic odour on removing the beer lid. I decided to use a new culture to get it going and used a 500ml starter bottle (using 4 tbsp malt extract, 300ml water, boiled for 10 minutes and cooled) and got the culture growing for 2 days before pitching into the beer, rousing gently too in the hope that maybe the yeast present might get going too.
Four or five days later, total time 3 weeks, I took another SG reading and it was 1020 but it was infected, acetified, just awful, did the only decent thing and watered the garden with it; flowers are still alive which is something.
The way I see it there are a number of possibilities and I'm a bit stumped as to why this yeast has not fermented out without problems in the first instance and with disastrous consequences in the second.
Firstly I am thinking did over heating the yeast during the initial culturing up before storing cause problems, mutation or weakening of the yeast strain, is that likely or even possible?
Secondly did I grow the yeast cultures up enough before pitching and was the problem due to a lack of yeast cells to see the job through quickly?
Thirdly is it down to yeast type as mentioned in the Graham Wheeler book on Northern yeast strains (page 26 of BYOBRA) where it is stated "... Northern yeast does not particularly enjoy making alcohol and needs frequent rousing to maintain fermentation..." which goes on to suggest twice daily rousing to introduce more oxygen is required and further mentions the processes of a number of Northern Brewers ?
On this point I note that Brewlab do not give specific advice to rouse this yeast and on their general help notes advise against rousing after pitching.
Thanks,
Wayne.