Kit instructions are horrendously outdated, and sometimes plain wrong.
(Beer) kits are made for convenience, almost foolproof if you can follow directions. But they may not give you the best possible beer from it.
If someone buys a kit and brews it as is, that's fine, doesn't know any better. It will be beer, but no real
Ringer 6-8 weeks later when he or she opens the first bottle.
But if that brewer has been on HBT, looked around, posted a thread on that kit, and is now better informed, why shouldn't he or she apply some of that wisdom right there?
The brewer is still adhering to the kit, mostly, with any or all of the following optional tweaks:
- just adds only half the extract to the 3 gallons of steeping water at the beginning of the (partial) boil,
- the balance of extract added at flameout,
Be aware of higher hop utilization with the lower gravity boil
- jostles some hop additions around and adds a couple ounces,
Need to know how to revise the hop schedule
- adds a 30' hop stand at a lowered temperature, rather than outdated 30, 15, 10, 5, and/or 0 minutes hop additions,
Need to know the effect on bitterness and flavor/aroma
- rehydrates the dry yeast before pitching,
There are some potential problems such as sanitation and too long a lag before pitching
- and possibly aerates the wort a bit.
Be careful about sanitation
- Then sticks the fermentor in a nice cool spot, ferm fridge, or in a water filled tote,
No problem
- skips the whole 2-4 weeks of secondary,
No problem
- dry hops in the primary fermentor, 2 weeks after pitching or when FG is on target and stable,
Be careful about air exposure when dry hopping
- cold crashes if possible,
Be careful about suckback
- packages 5 days after dry hopping rather than after 2 weeks,
No problem
- and limits exposure to air as much as possible during the whole process
No problem
I don't think we should deny the brewer that right by not telling him or her in advance.