I respectfully disagree that "letting it grow out" is anything but a loss of ramification opportunity and waste of potential wood. BR, et al grow long "bull canes" that don't contribute to the ramification because you wind up cutting almost all of it off, -and starting all over. A better strategy is to stand there with your scissors and snip the leader when the new stem has reached 3 parts: the first set of leaflets out and flat, second set straight out at the tip and mostly, but not entirely unfolded, and the leader mid-way between the two looking like a tiny ball of green. The tiny ball should be pinched or snipped off at that time. That will do two things: the two sets of leaflets will pretty much stop getting bigger, and a secondary bud somewhere else will begin growing that would not have grown at that time.
Of course, you will have to do this, everyday, until there are as many new growth points/amount of leaf surface as the plant wants. When that point is reached, all the leaflets will be smaller than normal with shorter internodes, and there will be many more of them making the canopy more dense with smaller leaves. The mass of the lost material that you removed will be a very small fraction compared to the mass you remove after a "let grow" cycle. The plant will get bigger by the same factor as the smaller amount of its growth that was not removed. And, you get ramification, the mother of taper.