Great piece, Ran.
Stoatin Brae's everything that's enjoyable about minimalism: Doak gets out of the way and lets the land speak for itself. The result consists a number of great holes as majestic as any over-sculpted signature course thanks to the views afforded from the high ground the course sits on (identified in the piece, but the stretches from 6-8 and 10-15 come to mind), brought together by stretches of understated, sound holes that satisfy despite being somewhat less spectacular. The 18th struck me as a bit anticlimactic, but that's a nit-pick if ever there was one, and almost unavoidable after the rest of the back nine given the land near the clubhouse.
As has been mentioned on a slope-related thread, I suspect Stoatin Brae is one of the hardest courses around relative to its slope (yes, there's no water, but good luck playing from the fescue in the latter half of the season).
Finally, full credit to Gull Lake View for making Stoatin an economical offering and giving folks the chance to see great architecture at a reasonable price. I believe it was $55 to walk when I played, and I met quite a few players who clearly were unfamiliar with good golf architecture, to the point that they couldn't figure out why they so enjoyed the course. In an expensive hobby such as GCA, it's refreshing to come across the Stoatin Braes of the world.