Where do you get your stats on Ninkasi award winners and contenders and their brewing style?
This years Ninkasi winner Mark Schoppe featured in both competitions I recently entered here in Texas. He enters a ton of beers and is fully open about his process. He does small batch brews with a technique he knows well no doubt and uses a carpet bomb strategy to maximize his medal haul. Just as an example his entry fees in the recent comp i was in I would estimate would have been close to or in excess of $100.
Nothing wrong with what he is trying to do, but to assume he is using some 3 vessel recirculating setup for 1-2 gallon batches is inane. Read his great interview in the recent issue of Zymurgy (I think it was in). The one with all the NHC winning recipes.
I'm not sure what planet your brewing on but +/- 5c mash temps are nowhere near acceptable regardless of technique. I can nail it to a fraction of a degree.
[Edit, reread you wrote .5C, disregard. +/- 0.5 degree would be entirely acceptable. With measurement error on a very good thermometers at +/-0.4C it's largely impractical to be more accurate.] Just takes bit of careful planning but is not hard. I have no doubt Schoppe is doing something comparable. They guy is a legend but he is homebrewing just like you and me. Granted it would seem he is brewing primarily for comps but that is what he wants to do so good luck to him.
The judges don't care or know if a beer is made on a 3 vessel HERMs or a simple 1 gallon BIAB setup mashed in the oven, or a kit and kilo brew. The only factor in play is the quality of the beer in the anonymous bottle and how best it conforms to the style guidelines.
In short. Your talking utter nonsense. read his
interview. Small batch brewing at its finest.