I must have missed/overlooked these remarks, they're so spot on.
Also with a wink to
@Soulshine2 for some of his observations.
Not to start a rant, or singling out our OP here,
@Timmy83. To me it often looks uninformed and out of touch when seeing new brewers/readers/members start "surveys" or other methods of "taking inventory" without first disclosing their own brewing processes, equipment, recipes, or otherwise providing examples of what they feel is lacking in their beer compared to commercial craft beer or other homebrew they've had.
So yes,
@Timmy83 please elaborate on your current brewing methods.
Since it's your thread it would be nice to engage, keeping us in the loop of which suggestions in this thread you're going to adapt and how.
Your posting history (public information to everyone on the forum) shows you've been shopping for some equipment here, but you haven't mentioned it. Can we perhaps assist or offer some pointers?
OP Here. I have been intentionally absent from the thread as I was looking for a non-directed discussion of homebrewers feelings, rather than an overly academic dissection of what I've been doing. I've read a number of things, starting with Papazian's book and Palmer's book, as well as a lot of other articles and posts about brewing, and am generally happy with my homebrew methods.
Why I wanted to get opinions/discussion on this is - while I feel that there are a lot of good resources out there, they lack some of that qualitative feel as to what people feel makes their beer go from good to great beer, but rather provide "this is how to make your beer better". And on top of it, I feel that in the last 5 years, the complexity of the equipment has grown exponentially... which leads to a lot of confusion on my end about the value of these things. I'm a proponent of learning a little, executing, and adding bits and pieces to the puzzle to keep growing.
I certainly welcome pointers, though. For what it's worth, I am decidedly a budget brewer - I won't spend hundreds of dollars only to save a bit of time or to make a very minor improvement in beer quality. I started brewing in a bucket and made my favorite beer as a partial mash. I believe that my biggest issue was previously was poor planning or failing to follow the rule of 1 (I threw a lot of stuff in without a lot of thought).
I stopped brewing for a long time due to some changes in lifestyle, new house, baby, apartment, and now I'm able to get at it again. I had sold off nearly all of my equipment: burner, kettle, kegging equipment, kegorator, fermenters and now really only have a better bottle and bucket fermenter.
Here's where I am right now:
I buy supplies mostly online (as closest local shop is about 40 minutes away -challenging with a baby)
I received a Robobrew as a gift - using for nearly-all grain brewing (though I'm not afraid to use extract to correct for poor efficiency) and have only ever done a single-step mash
I make yeast starters and have had good success with this
As for water treatment - this is new to me. I had a good source previously and just bought campden to remove chloramines, but this is it.
Fermentation happens at a loosely controlled 68 degrees (my basement - no chiller or heater)
I generally keg condition/carbonate
Other minor notes; I'm a fan of lighter-colored beers with citrusy hops. I don't grind my own malts (allow online homebrew shop to do it). I welcome all suggestions.