Making beer is easy. Making good beer is harder. Making great beer is harder still. Making a world class beer is damn near impossible.Making good beer isn’t difficult.
I sometimes wonder if Brulosophy has ever discovered something definitive.
True that.... I've worked with them on a few of the experiments where both difference was found and where it was not. Most of the experiments say that most of what we obsess about doesn't matter that much.The answer is yes. There are experiments where there were differences.
What they have discovered is a lot of things people worry about don't really make a difference on the homebrew scale. Their experiments have shaped the way I brew and save me countless hours.
For me, they have eased my mind on how much tolerance exists when brewing at the homebrew level. When I first started homebrewing I worried that missing OG by a point, or missing a mash temp by 1 degree could completely ruin a beer. Now that I’m a year and a half into homebrewing, what used to fret over has tolerances that will still make good beer. The only thing I pay strict attention to detail about is cleaning and sanitizing.Their experiments have shaped the way I brew and save me countless hours.
And I bet we fret about that more than necessary!The only thing I pay strict attention to detail about is cleaning and sanitizing.
If and when I do make a starter, I pitch the whole thing. Typically while it's active.
Although it differs from what I do, vitality starters work well. I don't do them simply because they tie me down to a schedule. I crash and decant because it gives me a window of several days to brew and pitch. Sometimes I just don't have the energy to brew when I want to..