I only occasionally will autoclave bottles, but often autoclave kegs

Obviously I work in a lab and do the whole sterile technique thing there. I'm careful when brewing but certainly not close to anal. I mostly do NOT wear gloves. I am however very selective about what surfaces my hands touch and am always on the lookout for ways to be as clean as possible.
I DO wear gloves however at a time when many would not bother, namely all of the grain handling steps. I had some problems with Lactobacillus contamination (luckily I like sour beers) and systematically went over my process to reduce any possible contamination points. We've all heard about avoiding crushing grains near where you brew and I might not have been quite far enough in this respect. However, I noticed an even more problematic step - mashing in!!!! I had simply been pouring the crushed grain into the mash tun while stirring. I noticed that this produced quite a dust cloud and afterwards noticed that my
ARMS were covered in grain dust. Fast forward to wort chilling and one could easily have dust fall off the unwashed arms (how many of us wash our arms?) into the cooling wort. I now wear elbow length gloves for all grain handling steps. Plus I no longer dumps the grains in. I add them scoop by scoop to minimize the dust clouds. I also removed/remediated all surfaces above where I brew so they won't collect any dust.
I was just doing some reading of a few brewing science journal articles and read that one of the recent advances that has resulted in better quality malts is the use of starter cultures during the
malting process, yes malting. Apparently this is sort of a probiotics thing to out-compete harmful microbes, and provides a few other benefits, like increased lauter effieciency. We'll some of these "probiotics" are lactobacilli!!! So not only is there natural lactobacillus on the barley, but the maltsters are actually adding more of it to the malt.