Well I've essentially been doing this simple AG brewing since I started AG. Initially 2009 but I got going properly/regularly in 2012/3 iirc. But I've just bought into a 3-way share of a Klarstein Mundschenk. I'm still brewing strong. I've made many many brews on my cooker. I stopped counting. And I will continue to do stove top smaller batches as well as 5 gallon all in one batches. What have I learned?
- that beer is not all about yeast but it is largely about yeast. The character of a beer is heavily dependent on the yeast and the fermentation.
- yeast starters are not a pain, they are joy itself, and the key to better beer. Pitch the best, healthiest yeast you can.
- there are very good dry yeasts now, but I'm mostly using liquid and reusing it so the cost is minimal. I re-culture from bottles a fair bit.
- I like hoppy brown/red/dark beers in winter. Hoppy browns and reds, darker bitters, porters.
- I like hoppy pale/dry/refreshing session ales in summer. Pale bitters, golden ales, pale ales and saisons.
- I like a medium amount of hopping - not the high quantities of American mad stuff, and not the miserly war stricken amounts that our traditional beers got stuck with. I quite often mix UK/Eu and US hops.
- I tend to start recipes with a yeast and work from there.
- I've mastered bottle conditioning! I prefer natural carbonation to forced carbonation.
- bleach kills everything!
Future plans? Just to make the best beers I can and focus on the types of beer I like best.
What have you learned, how have you progressed from simple AG, and what are your future wishes? Cheers!