I had to see if not doing a secondary would improve my beer. I will do a wrap-up report soon, but the short answer is that I will continue to use a secondary fermenter.
So here's the wrap up:
I did four comparisons between April and December. They were reported on in various posts from #61 to #146. The four:
1. Summer Ale, 10.9 HBUs, US05 yeast
2. Peter Cotton Ale, 15.2 HBUs, S33 yeast
3. Palace Bitter, 8.5 HBUs, Nottingham yeast
4. JB Gold, 7.3 HBUs, Muntons yeast
In each case the beers tasted very much the same. We tended to think of the secondary batches as being smoother and the primary only batches as being sharper. This may be muting of hops, but there might be something to a mellowing of the secondaries beyond that. I don't know. We tended to prefer the secondary batches.
Not doing a secondary did not improve my beers.
In each comparison the secondary batch was clearer at bottling. In two cases, #2 and #4, the amount of bottle sediment in the primary only batches was very aggravating. All beers were bottled two weeks from brewing, and S33 and Munitions can also leave a fair bit of sediment even when put through a secondary. My primary is a white plastic bucket that you can't see the beer in, so you can't tell when it's ready to bottle like you can in a glass carboy secondary.
In two cases oxidation due to using a secondary was evident. In comparison #1 darkening was very evident, and it was somewhat evident in #2. These were the more highly hopped brews. The color was the same in #3. Experimental error negates any color comparison in #4.
Conclusions:
1. Since not doing a secondary didn't improve my beers, I will continue to use a secondary. I find it easier to do so. I like the results. This may or may not be partly due to that's what I've been doing all the years since 1994 or that I fell in love with British bitters on trips to the UK as far back as 1988.
2. My IPA recipe, #2, will change to provide for not using a secondary. In the end it just isn't very IPAish due to loss of hop character. I will move to a more floculant yeast (probably S04 or Nottingham), not use a secondary, do some "controlled agitation" as per
@Bobby_M, give it three weeks instead of two in the fermenter, and add some ascorbic acid at bottling as per
@cmac62.
