Any help is welcome, as I just want to make the best beer I possibly can!
Don't leave your hydrometer in the bucket...just do what every book, every website, every brewer who advocated taking gravity readings does, and open the buck, take a sample, close the bucket, and repeat as necessary. Don't be afraid of doing that. It's what everyone does and won't ruin your beer that way...
Racking the beer when you don't need to, THAT's more apt to ruin your beer... Following crappy instructions will ruin your beer... panicking and trying to fix something that is probably fine will ruin your beer. Rushing the process, that will make for less than stellar beer.
But practicing the correct diagnostic process (i.e. Taking a gravity reading) will not ruin your beer.
Did you read the article I linked? Your beer is much more hardier than that.
You can open your fermenter a couple of times and you WON'T hurt your beer...just don't spit in it, or splash it around. Just open, grab your sample, and close it... 10 seconds? 20? No big deal.
Also much has been written on here (most of it by me) about the benefits of long primaries vs racking to secondary. Even many authors who originally influenced how most instructions are written have backed off and changed their mind.
This is one of the oldest and best discussions on
long primaries vs secondaries...probably every question you could ask has been covered in there.
There are many ways to make great beer, the best way is to try different ways and see what works best for YOU.
What works best for ME, and has netted me the medals I've won (when I entered contests,) and just made for great tasting beer (I have a lot of beer judge and professional brewer friends, and they all seem to like my beer, so I figure I'm doing a good job)
(1) Is to make sure I have plenty of yeast (that means a starter if it's liquid yeast, or the right amount of dry for the beer I'm brewing)
(2) Make sure there's plenty of oxygen to help the yeast do it's job. I use an oxygen bottle and stone, but there's many ways to do it, including splashing the heck out of the wort before you pitch yeast
(3) Making sure the temps are right for the yeast I'm using and the time of year...that means having something to warm it up if it's too cold, or cool it down if it's too hot... For heat I use a temp controller I made from an stc-100 aquarium controller, with a heat belt, or an electric blanket or just making sure the fermenter is in a warm place.
For cooling I use a swamp cooler, which is just a big tub with water that if I need to I can stick frozen water bottles in and swap them out, or an old fridge or space in my keezer if there's room.
(4) THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT ONE...
I pitch my yeast and walk away for a
month... That's it... I don't futz with it, or anything. If I'm not adding fruit, or dry hopping or doing something where I MIGHT need to move it to a secondary (which is rarer and rarer for me these days I usually do everything from dry hop to add fruit to my primary) to bulk age it, I LEAVE IT ALONE.
I trust the yeast to do the job they've been bred to do...AND I know that after they finish they will go back and clean up any off flavors they made during fermentation, then I let them go dormant, and fall to the bottom of the fermenter, then over the last week or so they will compress on the bottom, and when I CAREFULLY rack to a keg or bottling bucket I have 5 gallons of clear and crisp tasting beer that gets compliments and sometimes awards.
I don't cold crash, I don't use moss or finings of any time...I just let time and the yeasts do what the do best.
And THIS ALSO MEANS IPAS...people think you need to rush your ipas "because the hops will fade" but they forget that IPA travelled the world in barrels for months and years and still managed to be tasty...Let your beer ferment, and clear will mean you will have a BETTER IPA than a green one....
At week 3 I dry hop for the last week of the 4 weeks, and then bottle or keg.
If I DO secondary, or age in my oak barrel I STILL wait a month, again to make sure fermentation is complete, and the yeast settle out....which means less yeast down the line. But I only go to secondary to bulk age if It's going to be longer than 2-3 months...I've left beer in primary IN A BUCKET undisturbed for at least 6 or 8 months with no issues, and the beer was still fine. So if it's going to be a couple of months, and I'm not going to just rack to a keg, I don't worry about a secondary.
But that's pretty much it.... How I've been doing it for 10 years now.... Those simple steps and having a solid recipe (and sanitization of course) is all anyone really needs to do to make great beer.
Start with those things, and add water chemistry, ph balance, and other things and you won't have any trouble making great beer.
And especially figure out what works for you.
