I don't have much to add, but I would like to second the notion that consistency is easier with no sparge: your efficiency will be proportional to the water to gain ratio. If you brew 3 or 4 batches this way and take careful notes, you'll never miss your target again unless your thermometer fails or you change your tun. Doing infusions complicates things a little, but it still holds as long as you account for all the water and mix well after the last infusion.
Also the old saw "a couple extra pounds of grain" has always bothered me. No sparge is considerably less efficient than either batch or fly sparge, and that gap grows with boil gravity. It is, truly, the first gyle of partigyle in which nobody ever comes back for the second runnings. If you think of it that way, everything makes sense, including the "higher quality wort" part.
Personally, I will probably never sparge again in my life, but I almost never need a boil gravity over about 1.050.
Edited to add: I also regularly brew beers that attenuate 65% and 85% using the same (English) yeast. I have not seen any evidence that mash thickness affects fermentability at all.
Also the old saw "a couple extra pounds of grain" has always bothered me. No sparge is considerably less efficient than either batch or fly sparge, and that gap grows with boil gravity. It is, truly, the first gyle of partigyle in which nobody ever comes back for the second runnings. If you think of it that way, everything makes sense, including the "higher quality wort" part.
Personally, I will probably never sparge again in my life, but I almost never need a boil gravity over about 1.050.
Edited to add: I also regularly brew beers that attenuate 65% and 85% using the same (English) yeast. I have not seen any evidence that mash thickness affects fermentability at all.
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