I read something years ago that stuck with my and I have always tried to heed. A really good tube amp is the sum of three things. How good is the circuit, how good is the power supply, and how good is the iron (transformers). Those who favour OTL designs can ignore the iron. Of course there are other factors at play such as how much distortion there is in the tubes chosen, but if you use decent tubes and pay serious attention to the main three points, you should end up with a very nice amplifier.
I rebuilt hundreds upon hundreds of vintage tube amps and preamps before I started making my own. You could tell the good ones before you even started. If there were serious compromises in power supplies or transformers, then no amount of replacing old parts with better modern ones would ever make them great amps. You could tell the great amps from the schematic and quality of parts used.
So my advice is the build the best power supply you can, use the best iron you can, and find a good circuit. I exclusively build push pull amps. I don't build single ended or parallel single ended circuits. I understand there are those who favour such designs. I only use regulated supplies, and I also only use tubes with larger plates, and as many directly heated tubes as I can. Those are my choices based on the main rules above, and moving beyond the "conventional" designs I built for years. The conventional amps I built are very nice, but the latest full balanced circuits are far superior to my ear, and more costly to build.
So my advice on a good 15-20 watt 300b or other amp, is to heed the three main rules, and build a good push pull one. If you can DIY you will save lots of money. There are many great parts from companies like Neurochrome, the Rod Coleman regulators favoured by a pretty large camp, read Barola valves site for some great info...particularly on drivers. There are lots of places you can check out for a DIY 300b project.