Very nice post. I have two (minor) remarks.
But matter also has an equal but opposite twin called antimatter. So we have antiquarks, antineutrinos, antielectron(they're called positrons) antimuons, etc.
Strictly speaking, neutrinos may be their own antiparticles. It is actually the case in most neutrino mass models.
So why haven't we been able to achieve all this? Well, the thing is producing antimatter isn't so easy. The Large Hadron Collider operated by CERN is able to cough out about 10 million protons per minute when fully operational. Now that probably sounds like a lot.
Now, concerning the LHC. This machine is not actually the one used to produce and study antimatter at CERN. There are other devices dedicated to this aim. The reason is that even if the LHC produces a lot of antiparticles, all of those will annihilate before we would have the time to say a word. However, their tracks in the detector are sufficient for the physics investigated at the LHC.
RE: Matter's evil twin - Antimatter