I prefer to test the hookup.
Temporarily float the core and secondary, play ~2 kHz test tone and measure the voltage from signal ground to core and to the secondary. Power down, check that that B+ is at zero, flip the primary leads and retest. Leave the leads in the position that measured the lowest voltage. If the core and secondary measure differently, I normally use the one that causes the core to measure the lowest.
Be careful when doing this. Its easy for fingers and leads to get across high voltages. Leads are replaceable, fingers are not.
If you are >>not<< using feedback, leave the core floating and hook the secondary to which ever ground it is going to hook to and measure the core voltage with one secondary lead grounded at a time. Hook the lead that causes the lowest core voltage to ground (even if it makes the output polarity inverting, the speaker leads can always be swapped for polarity concerns.)
Then. . .You can also play with the orientation of the core (turn it in ~30 degree increments) to find lowest power supply pick up (with all of the leads floating again.)