manticle
Standing up for the Aussie Bottler
I see what you're saying but how much do you learn about brewing good beer by spending time washing 30 bottles? Week after week?
I learn about the importance of attention to detail, sanitation and cleanliness, patience and the rewards of hard work.
Actually neither kegging nor bottling teaches anything about brewing really and neither needs to get in the way of learning. I brew week after week and I read week after week. That teaches me about brewing. Bottling doesn't prevent any of that any more than kegging would accelerate it.
I was **** stirring while simultaneously standing up for bottling as I find the suggested associated difficulties a bit overblown. Kegging probably is much easier once you've outlaid, set up and worked out balancing your lines etc but bottling beer really isn't like writing a masters thesis, mining or living on a submarine for 6 months of every year. It's just putting 20 - 40 L of liquid inside some clean bottles and capping them. Some smaller micros still do it one-two bottles at a time and that's on a commercial scale.
I'm not after a kegging vs bottling debate as vs debates always annoy me. I bottle now, will keg in future but will probably still bottle some beer, especially special to be aged types. It just isn't the giant prehistoric rhinocerous that everyone makes it out to be though. Toughen up brewers.
Just re-read your question Flewy - I didn't mean to imply that bottling teaches me anything, just that in the order of priorities, I'm glad I researched extract, partial and all grain brewing before fussing about dispensing systems (actually still not fussed about dispensing systems).