Hi All
There's been a couple of comments in this thread about simple sugars increasing the overall fermentability of the wort

... however, there's mention in the White & Zainasheff, "Yeast" book (which I don't have with me, at the minute, so I won't quote), which is repeated/referenced in the BYO article by John Palmer that bellebouche linked to above where he says;
John Palmer, in BYO wrote:[Yeast] also ferment most of the monosaccharides before fermenting maltose and subsequently maltotriose. In fact, it is known that high levels of glucose and fructose in a wort (e.g. >15–20%) will inhibit the fermentation of maltose. This repressive behavior is probably a common cause of stuck fermentations in worts containing a lot of refined sugars — the yeast have fermented the monosaccharides and then quit, leaving more than half of the total sugars unfermented.
... but I'm wondering that (surely) that isn't an "all or nothing" situation

... it won't be that adding (invert) sugars makes the wort more fermentable until a (single) point where there's so much that ALL of the yeast cells lose the ability to ferment maltose and maltotriose and lead to a stalled ferment " leaving more than half of the total sugars unfermented" ... isn't it more likely to a be a curve where adding (invert) sugars to the recipe makes the wort more fermentable, until a point where adding more (invert) sugars causes SOME of the yeast to lose the ability to ferment maltose/maltotriose, and as you keep adding more (invert) sugars, the FG may then climb back upwards ... potentially passing the FG of the all-malt wort on it's way to "leaving more than half of the total sugars unfermented"

... if there were such a "curve" then there would be a "sweet spot" amount of (invert) sugar to add that would leave an FG slightly higher than an all-malt wort, with a higher proportion of maltose and maltotriose left in it
Mightn't that then cause a beer to end up (counter-intuitively) tasting MORE malty
This may not be a question specifically about Golden Syrup, as such ... but do the people above who have brewed with invert sugars feel they may have found this, at all?
Cheers, PhilB