I am defending that base malt can substitute for sugar, and that steeping and mashing are fundamentally the same.
Now get off your soap box.
Please don't misquote me.
The above was a direct response to another poster (ie not you) suggesting you could use specialty malts as a 1:1, weight by weight, pound for pound substitute for dextrose which is simply incorrect.
You defended the suggestion by saying it described the 'gist' of what makes a partial which is also incorrect. It is fundamentally and basically flawed (so the 'gist' is actually bollocks).
Your suggestion that a partial can be done with base malt on a stove top is correct and mashing and steeping are
similar. That I have no issue with. If you know how to steep you can certainly mash but they are not
identical. The main difference is the need to convert starches which is a big difference and needs to be mentioned. Otherwise every newb will think they can take 4 kg of uncracked pilsner malt, soak it in boiling water and make some beer with it.
Why is it so difficult to want to offer plain simple and correct advice to someone wanting to learn how to brew? Why is it too much to ask that blatanty incorrect advice be corrected?
I've offered wrong advice before and been pulled up on it. Instead of arguing about gists and soap boxes, I do a little research and correct myself, admit to being wrong and try and make sure my bad advice doesn't get taken for gospel by inexperienced brewers.
We really don't need to argue about this any further. You can replace sugar with mashed base malt if you know how to mash and you know what amounts to use. You can't replace it with steeped specialty malt, especially not on a 1:1 basis. That's not rocket science or soap boxing or pontificating or anything but understanding the absolute basics of brewing beer which was the original point.
Cheers.