Okay, this seems more like a sober point of view that I can accept. Since I don't own half of the gear that most of you seem to, oxygen is pretty low on my list. I'm certainly going to have a temp control chamber long before I start adding O2. I'm still brewing in a storage closet that is far from dedicated to my brewing.
I wish I could better understand the difference in final flavour. Perhaps I'd better appreciate it.
Matt,
You are living in an apple world and arguing about oranges. Do not take this discussion the wrong way. Beer can be made with the most rudimentary processes. Prior to this stout, my favorite beer, by far, was my first beer. It was the Cascade Pale Ale Partial Mash kit from Midwest. I'll never forget cracking the first beer, hearing a hiss, tasting it, and realizing that I just made beer on my stove top. Awesome stuff. I had practically no equipment, no temperature control, used poor sanitation, mishandled my yeast, and never even heard about oxygen or aeration. None of that mattered, I made beer. My point in the other thread is that it took 25 batches before I had that Eureka! feeling again (I think I even used that Eureka! word in my old thread). Over two years I pretty much maxed out on the the upgrades I wanted to make, but none of those upgrades made the clear impact of O2. I know it sounds crazy. I had a hard time believeing it too.
Rant time.
The hobby is different for different people. Some like the social aspect of brewday or clubs, some like drinking cheaply, some like competitions - me, I love to cook, and this is an extention of that joy. I enjoy brewing because like cooking, you make something from scratch, and get to taste the fruits of your labor. Is there anything more rewarding? Even better, you get to share. I am never happy to hand someone a plate of food that could have tasted better, and likewise, am not happy handing someone a beer that could have tasted better. I love the action, timing, organization, adjustments, and skills of the cooking process, so I really like putting those same skills to work on brewday. That said, I enjoy sharing and discussing brewday tips with others, because after all - of everything I know, it is proabably 10% experience and 90% learned from others. It is why I joined the community and am now willing to type out a thoughtful answer that might be useful to someone else.
As I said, brewing is different things for different people. Craigtube enjoys drinking his own beer as much as Jamil enjoys drinking his own beer. One has a youtube video, the other writes books. A judge might not say their beers are equal in quality, but that does not mean the brewers can not enjoy making and drinking them equally.
I am afraid you are missing the point of the discussion, and maybe this board in general. The OP clearly wants to hear some insite on a process change that he heard might get his beer to a new level. We offered him some good tips and experiences, but you told him not to bother because you have made 6-8 beers and people have been brewing without oxygen systems for thousands of years. Several people (myself included) jumped down your throat, because your comments were no help to the OP. Do not confuse that with accusing you of making crap beer. The two are not connected.
This community is built on exchanging ideas and experiences to help new brewers and better the hobby. Someone who is not willing to listen to new ideas, and constantly falls back on "if its not broke don't fix it" and the awful RDWHAHB are not contributing anything to the community, and certainly not moving the hobby forward. RDWHAHB is a philosophy in the hobby, not the answer to a good question.
I strongly suggest spending some time on the board, listen to podcasts, read books, experiment for yourself, basically just get some experience, and then start to offer your opinion. Questions are always welcome, but uneducated comments; not so much.
Does that make sense?
Joe