Grumpy this one is....
Sadly however, it may well be irrelevant.
The point was that if the aircraft - any aircraft - is operated at a sufficiently forward CG and has had a significant amount of the elevators pitch authority trimmed off, it may not have enough pitch authority left to get a proper stall, or a proper full stall landing.
Does that cover the "huh?" or do I need to use smaller words?
The reason that is potentially irrelevant is that the FAA in it's ultimate wisdom is now focused on stall avoidance and requires pilots to do slow flight to avoid a stall warning (the first bleat of the stall warning horn, or the stall buffet in an A/C that is not stall warning horn equipped, and worse, to demonstrate a stall recovery at the warning, not the stall. As it was described to me, the current concern is that training students to fly around with the stall horn activate might lead to normalization of deviance, where the stall warning is now normal and is ignored. Apparently it's far better to train pilots who've never experienced an actual stall and who have no experience flying an aircraft very close to the critical AoA, and hoping they'll never actually be in a situation where that's necessary.
Theoretically then, if the instructor just teaches to the check ride, and does not require the student to do an actual stall, a student could earn a PPL (and a commercial license for that matter) without ever stalling an aircraft.
Given the OPs' "after many hours of excuses I finally took muy 150 up for stalls", I gather he isn't real keen on stalls, and that's really unfortunate, and I suspect may be an artifact of his training to the recent change in standards.
If I'm getting a checkout in a light aircraft, or doing a pre-buy check flight, intentionally stalling the aircraft is very close to the top of the list, usually just after doing some rolls on a point to get comfortable with the control harmony and some slow flight to start feeling how it performs close to a stall. Those stalls will include, at a minimum, power on, power off, and approach to landing stalls. If nothing else, it's one of the things necessary to determine if the aircraft is properly rigged and I would not even consider buying a light aircraft I have not stalled several times in various configurations.