Hey guys, just finished my first batch of beer, a belgian white which turned out ok for my first beer. I am about to do my second beer, a chocolate/coffee stout and had some questions about the 1 2 3 rule. The first time around, I followed the recipe given to me by the local home brew shop. It was about 5 days in the primary and 2-3 days in the secondary followed by 2 weeks in the bottle. The OG and FG reading were pretty close to what the recipe said we should have, maybe 2 to 3 points off. Since then I have been doing alot of reading around here and noticed that my timing on my first brew seemed really off. When I bought the stout recipe I asked the owner and he said that too long in the primary and secondary will allow the yeast to settle resulting in longer bottling times. Reading this site, it seems some of you guys go for weeks to months in the primary followed by extended periods in the secondary, which seems totally opposite to what the local store owner said. I've gathered that the longer times are for the beer to mature and increase in alcohol for those bigger beers, but will ALL beers benefit from longer primary/secondary times? I know that each brew/fermentation will be different but is there anything to this idea of yeast settling after long periods in the primary/secondary? And as long as my I am close to my FG, is that enough to move on the secondary (btw, how long is too long/too short in the secondary) and then bottle? Sorry for such a long post, but been trying to figure out what to do before I start my stout which I have been itching to do so. Thanks for any help and sorry if I missed any obvious threads that answer all my questions, I tried my best with the search option.