Well I now know not to refer to diacetyl but instead to Vicinal Diketones - which probably doesn't help with typing it
. There are two of these VDKs which both have butterscotch type flavours and are formed when alph acetohydroxy acids are excreted out of the cells, where they undergo oxidative decomposition to VDKs. They are produced during primary fermentation mostly - when the yeast is growing at the start as it normally requires oxygen to produce in the mitochondria. Removal relies on active yeast in suspension to metabolise it into 2,3-butanediol which has a much higher sensory threshold so you don't taste it. That also means yeast don't technically make diacetyl - rather it is formed outside of the cells.
Short and less wordy version shown in the graph below (which I really hope is ok to reproduce here). The VDKs are only just past the highest level as the SG reaches target. A 48 hour 'diacetyl rest' is used to help remove them, but the rate of removal will be temperature dependent. Soo... if you crash chill as soon as target SG is reached, you'll drop the yeast out of suspension and massively slow the rate of removal. This makes so much more sense now of why in a lager diacetyl rest the idea of raising the temperature at the end. By that time the flavour compounds of fermentation are complete, most of the carbohydrate sources are used up so you're not going to get esters either when raising the temperature, but the rise in temperature releases CO2 from solution, improving yeast suspension as it rises, and improves speed and effectiveness of VDK removal!
One of the things I am enjoying about this course is the 'Ah hah' moments when these empirical practices suddenly make so much sense. One of the things I am not enjoying is the word salad of chemical terms for this module. I realise I've been reading the same paragraph over for about 5 minutes and it's still not making more sense.
View attachment 91247