If I had thought about it at the time I could have asked the CFI I spent ten hours with to just include an FR, but c'est la vie, I was really having too much fun learning to tame an airplane that still flies me more than I do it!
More review never killed anybody... but it's worth remembering for next time. If you're going to spend that much time taking dual, you may as well make it a FR. You could add the FR onto a session of instruction intended for just about any other purpose...although, again, it's only an "automatic" FR for ratings, not endorsements.
It worked out very well for me doing my tailwheel add-on... that airplane had minimal performance and minimal equipment, but the briefing/debriefings, pattern work, air work, and old-fashioned nav work made me "legal" to fly faster airplanes with more complex systems. I hardly noticed the FR, but we got all the points covered.
That 11 hours of dual seemed more like a FR to me than the "automatic" FR that goes with completion of the PP-Glider
rating... even
more different from all the aircraft I have most of my hours in, and I have yet to land anywhere other than "home plate" in a glider. I had made many flights in that glider before getting around to the check ride, and for a power-plane guy, a lot of the flying was like starting all over again, but it's just so
different.
Felt like I was cheating or something... even though I had to be prepared to be quizzed on
anything relevant to my PPASEL (the "gotcha" for PPASEL holders adding on the PPG).
But unless you've been away from flying for a long time (as was the case for me before the FR prior to my "tailwheel FR"), I see no harm in "taking advantage" of this rule... like any first-rating check ride, what's being observed (and fine-tuned) more than anything is one's ability to command... it's about the basics, not specifics.