Offering advice on a routine, such as naming particular exercises and in which order, this number of reps & sets, best angles, specific manners of execution, is a chasing of the wind. Techniques have such a large spectrum of variables and each technique is influenced by a subjective preference which varies from person to person. People tend to pass on what they like to do “right now,” and what is most effective for them, “right now.” However, the body has season's of change as well, and ANY new technique can be effective if executed with the proper principles. Muscle stimulation and the excitation of adaptions and re-adaptions are a result of princples, and not as much about technique. I'll let someone else offer their techniques, but I can offer some general principles that are less infinite in ideology.
Imagine a teeter totter, on one end of the teeter totter is VOLUME and on the other end is INTENSITY. These are the two prime elements you'll have to play with to tweek your program.
Volume and Intensity have an inverse relationship. As a general rule, muscle hypertrophy is greater when you emphasize VOLUME, while strength is best perpetuated by emphasizing INTENSITY.
Volume can consists of total reps & sets, number of exercises performed and frequency of workouts.
Intensity can consists of weight used, time under tension, and shorter rest intervals.
However, you need both volume and intensity to be on par, volume must be relative to intensity, otherwise you end up doing cardio. Too much intensity with an excessive absence of volume, turns into greater neural adaptions, as oppose to physiological. Neither is exclusive to one type of adaption over the other. The difference is the emphasis of one over the other, but you can't have a sole adaption of either muscle or strength.
Typical bodybuilding for muscle follows a 3-4 set/8-12 or 10-15 rep scheme. While a strength routine is typically 2-3 sets/5-8 reps scheme. These are just generic examples.
However, in spite of my academic knowledge, my muscles simply respond better to High Intensity, but I still switch up my program back to higher volume when my body stops responding to an intensity focused routine.
What's good for you? Try the different techniques, DC, HIT, Traditional, and more often then not, what you respond well to usually coincides with what you enjoy the most. Not always, but if you're enjoying yourself, it effects everything, from effort, dedication, consistency, creativity, enthusiasm, motivation and all of those elements will effect results (as they effect how you invest).
My only real suggestions are, do all your complex movements first and isolations last. In conjunction with the previous suggestions, do all your free weights first, then machines/cables last.
Lastly, I re-read some of the first pages, taking into consideration what your workouts have looked like, contrasted with what supps you're on and the first thing that came to mind is this.
At the very least, add an extra set to your two set exercises. You're on creatine and Beta Alanine (White Flood), creatine boosts strength performances at the lower repetition range, while Beta Alanine increases performance at the higher rep range. Although the BA's effects are intra-set based, you can loosely base your supplementation program to:
Creatine = Intensity
Beta Alanine = Volume..... loosely.
Since you're on “somewhat” of a recomp, and a re-establishing of strength, I realize that the creatine probably has priority in which compound you want to most exploit. However, since you are on Beta Alanine, you might as well try to take some advantage of it, so I would extend your two set exercises to three.
On the other hand, if you really want to take the two set approach to a strength extreme, then use a weight you can only push maybe 6 times, because two sets of 10 reps is a bit in the margin.
Before picking a plan, clearly establish what your primary objectives are. Your body can adapt to many different stimulations, but OPTIMAL adaption is accomplished when the objective is clear & concise.
First establish a clear objective, because I can go on forever with scientific data and bodybuilding philosophies.