Well, I had a chance to test a whole mess of loads today. Unfortunately, I brought too much along, and I was rushed toward the end. I had two loads with AA #7 in .357. One was a 158 gr. KSWC over 10 grains, the other was a 158 gr. JHP over 10.3 grains, and with a magnum primer.
My ammo box shows 10 rounds fired of the lead SWCs, to be honest, I don't remember shooting a single one, and I didn't mark the targets, because we were about to leave. I see some sharp holes here and there, so judging from those, they weren't as accurate as with other powders. I could be that I was rushed, because those bullets have been accurate through my DW M12 from 4.3 gr. of Unique up to 6.6.
However, I did set aside the target which I shot with 158 gr. JHP (Speer #4211) over 10.3 grains of AA#7, and those loads were quite good. I strongly suggest NOT using a magnum primer as suggested in the Accurate online reloading guide 3.1. As Speer #13 claims, the pressure really spikes with magnum primers. I have severely flattened primers to show for it. I also had to whack the ejector to get out the empties. However, it made a big ol' boom and muzzle flash.
This powder is not sooty, but it does leave behind lots of little yellowish-green balls, so it's somewhat "dirty". You may want to blow down the chamber(s) to clear 'em out. They also tend to stick together, and made some interesting patterns of clusters on the inside of the spent cases. Yes, I'm easily amused. I had to dump these powder remnants from my gun cases and ammo baggies.
Overall, I like the powder, and I will load more of it. I also have a pound of AA#9, and I tried it, but only several rounds.
EDIT: These were just initial test loads, offhand at 10 yards or so. Next time I will be more "scientific" about it, and do 25 yards from a rested position.