Thanks
That experiment might be valid, but all I have to do is work out how to brew it consistently via ANY method first. I've brewed it 4 times - 1 was a sink job because I accidentally contaminated my fermentor with non-food grade silicone sealant, one was the "I like this beer"batch, the next was the Mash Paddle brew, the last was the one I have in the ferm fridge now... not so good, my mash stuck like glue, I couldn't do the steps properly and ended up doing an impromptu triple decoction. It hasn't' worked out fantastically and the FG is too high for my liking.
So - I have managed a 50% strike rate with this recipe on a "normal" system and have yet to brew
any brew exactly the same twice via any method at all. I personally don't believe that side by sides prove anything at all if the beer is brewed on different systems or by different brewers.
Spills, Velophile and I tried to brew the same beer on our three different systems.. same ingredients, same mash schedule/temps, same boil and hopping regime - tried for the same fermentation temps. Three different beers. Mine and Spills were similar, but thats being nice about it, Velophile's was a completely different beer. Same recipe though.
The recipe isn't "proven" or "award winning" - the combination of the recipe, the system and the brewer is what achieves those things. eg: If your system always gives a slightly higher FG than an "award winning" recipe says it should achieve.. that makes neither the recipe or your system bad, it just means that you need to compensate by altering one of the two sets of variables.
A good recipe is only good if it makes good beer on your system... anything else is meaningless.
Having said all that, I use my small batch BIAB as my pilot system for trying out new beers, new styles and new recipes... the results aren't particularly different when I translate them to my HERMS but they aren't the same either.
Brew many times... thats the answer
Thirsty