IMHO, that's mainly for high-gravity beers. Not sure about the OG of your Westy clone, but regardless of what they say on the website, almost any strain like this will benefit from incremental feeding if you're trying to maximize your attenuation on high gravity wort. It stresses the yeast much less because it keeps the relative specific gravity, at any given point, lower. In other words, let's say your total sugar value is 1.125. If your original wort was that high, and you dumped the yeast into it, it would stress it out because of the pressure of the heavy wort. However, if you started with a 1.080 wort, let it ferment down to 1.040, then added 0.020 worth of sugar, let that ferment down to 1.040 again, and so on, until you'd added all your sugar, you'd still have used the same amount of carbohydrates, but your maximum gravity would be much lower and the yeast would have a much better chance of finishing fermentation healthy. I did this incremental addition process with a Mephistopheles clone and made it up to 15% alcohol. It's a PITA, but it's not really specific to the 3787 by any means.