This book is very "technological". Like Winery 101; no, more like Winery 501. But definitely worth having in your personal library if you have anything to do with making wine.Get more detail about Winery Technology and Operations:A Handbook for Small Wineries.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Save Winery Technology and Operations:A Handbook for Small Wineries
This book is very "technological". Like Winery 101; no, more like Winery 501. But definitely worth having in your personal library if you have anything to do with making wine.Get more detail about Winery Technology and Operations:A Handbook for Small Wineries.
Monday, February 22, 2010
Discount Sotheby's Wine Encyclopedia: Fourth Edition, Revised
I gave my husband this (very large) book as an Xmas gift so he could learn about wine since we have a great store nearby us that sells many international varieties.
My husband loves the book (and so do I!). It has great maps and pictures. It breaks down the information in easy to follow sections by country and region. It's very in-depth for someone who wants more nitty gritty details on wines of different regions.
This book is great. We can now look up most any wine we own or want to purchase and it is represented in this book.
It's more than just a great coffee table book. It is a great reference guide and will come in handy many years to come.
Excellent book!Get more detail about Sotheby's Wine Encyclopedia: Fourth Edition, Revised.
Cheapest Drinking with George: A Barstool Professional's Guide to Beer
what a fun book. would recomend this book for any one that loved watching "Cheers"Get more detail about Drinking with George: A Barstool Professional's Guide to Beer.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Buying Hugh Johnson's Pocket Wine Book 2010: 33rd Edition
This is the 8th year I have purchased this annual guide and it has never let me down.
Thin enough to put in your suit pocket but informative enough to answer all your questions. Get more detail about Hugh Johnson's Pocket Wine Book 2010: 33rd Edition.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Buy Great Wine Made Simple: Straight Talk from a Master Sommelier
READ FOUR TIMES COVER TO COVER. I SHOP FOR WINE WITH THE UTMOST CONFIDENCE AFTER READING THIS BOOK. THANKS, ANDREA!!Get more detail about Great Wine Made Simple: Straight Talk from a Master Sommelier.
Purchase There Is a Cure for Diabetes: The Tree of Life 21-Day+ Program
I purchased this for a Christmas gift so won't know what kind of read this book will turn out to be for a while yet. The shipping was fairly fast and overall I am pleased so will give a high rating for that reason only.Get more detail about There Is a Cure for Diabetes: The Tree of Life 21-Day+ Program.
Friday, February 19, 2010
Order From Vines to Wines: The Complete Guide to Growing Grapes and Making Your Own Wine
It was purchased to help me with growing my own grapes for winemaking. The information was very helpfulGet more detail about From Vines to Wines: The Complete Guide to Growing Grapes and Making Your Own Wine.
Where To Buy Vinifera 2010 Wall Calendar: The World's Great Wine Grapes and their Stories
I just love the new 2010 Vinifera Wine Calendar! In fact, I love all the products from Ghigo Press. Thank you and keep 'um coming!Get more detail about Vinifera 2010 Wall Calendar: The World's Great Wine Grapes and their Stories.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Shop For A16: Food + Wine
one of our favorite restaurants in SF, nice to now have cookbook.
Great photos. Have given as gifts and recipients very pleased!!
Fun to duplicate the food at home that we so enjoy at the restaurant!Get more detail about A16: Food + Wine.
Everything but the Coffee: Learning about America from Starbucks
Bryant Simon, the author of "Boardwalk of Dreams: Atlantic City and the Fate of Urban America," has written another compelling book about a once beloved, now declining, American institution in "Everything But the Coffee: Learning About America from Starbucks." From its inception in the early 1970s to today, Simon traces the rise and fall of Starbucks, not only as a company and business venture, but also as a piece of Americana.
Simon, a Professor of History at Temple University, defines what he calls "the Starbucks moment," where in a short period of time, Starbucks exploded and was literally everywhere. However, as he points out, as quickly as Starbucks arrived and became the talk of the business community and Wall Street, the company began to fade and lose its luster. He describes how Starbucks sought people of status and wealth to tout its name and logo and then how it used those high end customers to draw in the middle class. It was the middle class customers buying high priced coffees and lattes that allowed Starbucks its meteoric rise and swollen stock price.
Starbucks, says Simon, convinced a whole group of people that they could abdicate their responsibilities for environmentalism, human rights, poor peasant farmers, and an array of other causes to a large corporation simply by paying more for its products. Yet despite the company's advertising - or is it propaganda? - Simon shows that very little of what Starbucks claims is reality. One example he sites is the environmental issue of recycling. Clearly, using ceramic cups that can be washed is more environmentally sound than using paper cups that go into a landfill. Simon opines that rather than providing reusable cups for its customers, Starbucks continues to use paper cups (the inside is coated with a polyethylene plastic) so that its logo can continue to be seen. After all, if a customer has a paper cup, he or she is more inclined to leave the coffee shop with cup in hand to become a walking advertisement. In an amusing story, he recalls going into a Starbucks and asking for a mug because he was going to drink his coffee on site. Bedlam ensued as the staff searched for a ceramic mug. Just as he was about to give up and settle for a paper cup, an employee shouted "I found it!" "It" was the only ceramic, or reusable, cup in the place.
In other chapters, Simon talks about Starbucks role as a "Third Place," which is a term used to describe somewhere outside the home or workplace where people meet. Starbucks' ventures into music and books and its impact on globalization and fair-trade coffee are some other topics covered.
As the author states in the Afterword, "Everything but the Coffee" was not intended to be a hatchet job on Starbucks. "I defended Starbucks against what I saw then...as knee-jerk attacks against bigness...." However, after getting into his research, "...I stopped seeing the company as an engine of community. Instead, I saw it as a mythmaker offering only an illusion of belonging...." What the reader will find is a well-written, well-researched work that will be an eye opening experience for those who have loved or hated Starbucks. Eric Schlosser's "Fast food Nation" opened the first decade of the 21st Century with an expose of McDonalds and the fast food industry. Bryant Simon ends the decade with a dissection of Starbucks and the abdication of consumer responsibility.
Get more detail about Everything but the Coffee: Learning about America from Starbucks.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Vintage Spirits and Forgotten Cocktails: From the Alamagoozlum to the Zombie 100 Rediscovered Recipes and the Stories Behind Them Review
If you're only going to own one cocktail recipe book make it this one. I have perhaps three dozen in my collection but none is better at providing clear instruction and fascinating history for each drink. From alternatives to hard-to-find ingredients to stories of who really invented the French 75, you'll keep coming back to this one for more. (One side effect for me was that it turned me into a collector of old mixology books and a seeker of rare ingredients. I make my own grenadine now, by hand, because Ted made me realize the commercial products I have access to are all terrible.) Reading-- and frequently using --this book will not only make you a better mixologist, it will make you a better person. Get more detail about Vintage Spirits and Forgotten Cocktails: From the Alamagoozlum to the Zombie 100 Rediscovered Recipes and the Stories Behind Them.
The Physiology of Taste, or Meditations on Transcendental Gastronomy Top Quality
You cannot say you love gastronomy without having ever read this book!Get more detail about The Physiology of Taste, or Meditations on Transcendental Gastronomy.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Bartending For Dummies (For Dummies (Cooking)) This instant
The Yellow and Black is, if nothing else, a very reliable brand -- they get smart people with expertise to write their books, and unlike some of their competition they don't seem to put quite as much effort into woo (even if there is an Astrology for Dummies book). Bartending for Dummies is by now in its third edition, and it keeps the standard up.
Ray Foley may not quite be the Charlie Papazian of mixologists, but he's certainly one of the most influential in the field, being the editor of Bartender Magazine and the writer of numerous cocktail collections, and therefore an obvious choice for the book. His writeup of the ingredients is half the book (far more than you'll find in a more professionally-oriented book) and unlike a lot of other bartending guides, Foley doesn't shy away from risque drink names (like, for esample, the Red Headed Slut or the Adios, Mother... yeah.), which is pretty important when a lot of younger bar culture from GenX down is quite freewheeling and unselfconscious about its hedonism.
The only thing that knocks a star off the top is the fact that it isn't quite professional; that may be unavoidable, though, as the familiar cover design, for better or for worse, screams "amateur at work", so the average bartender is not going to have a copy of this next to the cash register like she might Mr. Boston or the The Bartenders Black Book. (But hey, if you need it around your workplace, a simple black book cover should solve the problem quickly.) It's hard to say a book in its third edition is really hip, but it's up-to-date enough for most people's needs.Get more detail about Bartending For Dummies (For Dummies (Cooking)).
Clone Brews: Homebrew Recipes for 150 Commercial Beers Immediately
This book is a great collection of ingredient lists for clones of commercial beers. I have brewed several recipes from the book and even when they're not spot-on clones, they are very nice beers, and are good examples of the various styles. This book is geared towards brewing with malt extract, but all-grain versions of the recipes are listed. My biggest gripe with this book is that it is really a collection of ingredient lists, not a collection of recipes. Beer is a fermented product, and the recipes presented in this book deal only with things that happen to the wort up until yeast is pitched. In reality, what happens after yeast is pitched is at least as important as what happens before. This book could be a great instructional volume if the authors really dove into the details of the fermentation process for each of these beers. Do you want to start fermentation cool and warm up gradually? Is this beer better aged for some amount of time at a specified temperature before bottling? Should it be allowed to bottle condition for an unusually long time? If it is your goal to brew the best beer that you possibly can, I would recommend pairing the recipes in this book with another book on brewing styles, such as Brewing Classic Styles by Jamil Zainasheff. In doing so, you are coincidentally far more likely to 'clone' the commercial beers featured in Clonebrews.Get more detail about Clone Brews: Homebrew Recipes for 150 Commercial Beers.
Monday, February 15, 2010
Mix Shake Stir: Recipes from Danny Meyer's Acclaimed New York City Restaurants Get it now!
This book is a great source for current "it" drinks and gives you plenty of inspiration to experiment with the ingredients for yourself. I highly recommend the 'Velvet Underground', the liqueur Velvet Falernum is YUMMY! The only negative I would have is that to buy all the ingredients, some of them not the usual suspects, would cost a small mint. That is why I'd say draw inspiration from and be creative on your own.Get more detail about Mix Shake Stir: Recipes from Danny Meyer's Acclaimed New York City Restaurants.
Sunday, February 14, 2010
The Homebrewer's Garden: How to Easily Grow, Prepare, and Use Your Own Hops, Malts, Brewing Herbs Buy Now
This book had a totally different approach to home-brewing.
One that should be appreciated by any amateur gardener.
Get more detail about The Homebrewer's Garden: How to Easily Grow, Prepare, and Use Your Own Hops, Malts, Brewing Herbs.
Fresh Vegetable and Fruit Juices Order Now
Very good book and very informative. It lets you know what juices are good for an ailment which is helpful. Get more detail about Fresh Vegetable and Fruit Juices.
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Uncorking the Past: The Quest for Wine, Beer, and Other Alcoholic Beverages Decide Now
So says Patrick McGovern, and this book explains how it got that way. McGovern theorizes that organisms great and small, perhaps from the unicellular to non-human primates to humans, are hard wired to crave the products of sugar fermentation, particularly alcohol. This taste for fermented beverages has been a driving force in the evolution of human biology, agriculture, culture and religion, or so it would seem. McGovern documents this evolution through archeological findings from Europe, Africa, Latin America, Asia, the Middle East -- anywhere and everywhere wine, beer and other alcoholic beverages have been made for many thousands of years,from grain, fruit, honey and whatever other raw material mankind could coax into creating intoxicating food and drink. We are, as McGovern has entitled his very first chapter, "Homo Imbibens."
As the book concludes, summing up the theme, "our species' intimate relationship with fermented beverages over millions of years has, in large measure, made us what we are today."
Being neither an archeologist nor a paleontologist, I found some of the copious detail presented in this book to be tough sledding. Nevertheless, it is a fascinating read and worth the effort. Get more detail about Uncorking the Past: The Quest for Wine, Beer, and Other Alcoholic Beverages.
Uncommon Grounds The History Of Coffee And How It Transformed Our World Right now
...then read this book.
I'll admit this book is thoroughly researched and provides an in-depth history on coffee. I learned more about coffee than I could have imagined. However, the author goes into tedious, minute detail that a strong cup of your favorite beverage will not prevent you from going to sleep. The conversational tone is mono; it reads more like a textbook, not light reading at all. That's why I took off 2 stars.Get more detail about Uncommon Grounds The History Of Coffee And How It Transformed Our World.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Lowest Price The Professional Bartender's Handbook: A Recipe for Every Drink Known - Including Tricks and Games to Impress Your Guests
The book came in perfect condition and it arrived much earlier than anticipated. I was more than pleased with this product.Get more detail about The Professional Bartender's Handbook: A Recipe for Every Drink Known - Including Tricks and Games to Impress Your Guests.
Low Price Juice Collection (Hamlyn)
Thank you Harumi for such a great Japanese cookbook! I absolutely love this cookbook. I was so excited to see Harumi came out with a new cookbook. I have her other two cookbooks and really enjoy them. But, when I received this cookbook in the mail I fell in love right away with the book itself. Beautiful photos to go along with the delicious recipes. I have been so inspired by the recipes in this book and everything I have made has been so tasteful (my husband and daughter agree, too). This cookbook has really inspired me. I have several Japanese cookbooks (I mostly cook french food), but Harumi's books (especially this one) are the only ones that are so flavorful when I make them. The Sauteed Leeks and Mushrooms were so easy to make and terrific. Loved the Tuna Tataki, Fried Rice with Crabmeat and most of all loved the Tofu with a Spicy Minced Meat Sauce. Can't wait to try more. If you are interested in Japanese cooking this cookbook is a must! Also, can't believe Harumi is over 60 years old - She looks amazing - must be the Japanese diet!!!Get more detail about Juice Collection (Hamlyn).
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Save Living Raw Food: Get the Glow with More Recipes from Pure Food and Wine
Excellent book!
I highly recommend this book. I feel so much healthier, and happier. This book explains in detail all the issues around why we should and should not be on a raw food diet. The recipies are excellent. My husband and 14 year old son have been on a raw food diet for the last two weeks and do not even know it! The recipes are so good, they have not caught on to the fact that the food I have been serving them is good for them! It gives me so much satisfaction. Thank you for explaining to me why this lifestyle is so important.
Angela Hofmeister
Get more detail about Living Raw Food: Get the Glow with More Recipes from Pure Food and Wine.
Discount The Bartender's Bible: 1001 Mixed Drinks and Everything You Need to Know to Set Up Your Bar

This edition is useful not only for its recipes, but for its information, as well. The introduction has a similar feel to the early chapters of The Joy of Cooking in that it offers instruction on the essentials for stocking a home bar as well as comprehensive lists of equipment and glassware -- complete with illustrations. The recipes are thorough in detailing method, which is much more useful than some Internet collections and other books I've seen which only list the ingredients (and sometimes measures) for a given drink. There is also a bit of fun and education to be found here. Each chapter and most of the hallmark drinks have write-ups about their history or fun anecdotes.
I felt the need to write this review after reading another for the same title in which the reviewer aired grievance about the book not including an alphabetical list of the drinks by name. That is what the index in the back of the book is for. Maybe he just never got that far. I have several books on cocktail recipes, and this one is definitely my go-to. Having only 1001 recipes, it is incomplete, but it's the most useful one on my shelf.Get more detail about The Bartender's Bible: 1001 Mixed Drinks and Everything You Need to Know to Set Up Your Bar.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Cheapest Beer School: Bottling Success at the Brooklyn Brewery
A great read for anyone starting their own business alongside a friend, neighbor, or coworker. Whether your new business is the business of beer or something else, this book provides great insight and inspiration into such an undertaking. Well written and full of wit, Beer School defines entrepreneurism at its most essential core. Quoting Tom -- "To minimize the self-inflicted agony, be honest with yourself up front. Open your personal cupboard and take stock of what you've got and what you don't."Get more detail about Beer School: Bottling Success at the Brooklyn Brewery.
Cheap Parker's Wine Bargains: The World's Best Wine Values Under $25
Parker started off in wine reviewing with an eye toward consumer value. He exposed wines that were well-known but ultimately inferior products and championed other wines that were excellent but obscure. Since then his ratings have been much argued over and his influence has been both decried and heralded. Well, whatever.
This is a book built on his original reputation, showing us wines that were good whether we had heard of them before or not. With a price cutoff of $25, this is not as "low priced" as some of the other wine bargain books out there, but I think the book is an excellent resource for wines that are both excellent on a budget and really good wines that happen to be inexpensive (often because no one had heard of them before). Parker tastes a lot of wines and has strong opinions on them, and both of those attributes help this book.
I would also note that the price ranges listed (and the $25 limit on wines for the book) represent some sort of nominal industry pricing and in my experience many of the wines are available at retail for randomly lower prices. And take the price of this ephemeral book as a small cost of avoiding a dodgy bottle of wine. (Note that the Parker tasting scores do NOT appear in this book. Just recommended wines, approximate prices, and some text about the wine.)Get more detail about Parker's Wine Bargains: The World's Best Wine Values Under $25.
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Buying Complete Book of Juicing: Your Delicious Guide to Youthful Vitality
I bought this book as a gift for my boss, but my coworker and I are actually the ones all over this book! it is seriously like a juicing bible!!! I can't get enough of reading this book. it's really easy to read, and I reread sections all of the time. I haven't used the recipes at all. I read it mainly to figure out what fruits and veggies are the best for juicing, then I go out and just juice whatever I can get my hands on! I think to juice it's really important to understand about the nutrients and how they break down in the fridge and so forth so if you're going to go through all the effort, you should be doing it right! I love this book so much my coworker and I are now going to be buy it for ourselves!!Get more detail about Complete Book of Juicing: Your Delicious Guide to Youthful Vitality.
Buy The Juice Fasting Bible: Discover the Power of an All-Juice Diet to Restore Good Health, Lose Weight and Increase Vitality
I have read a few books on the subject and I love this one. It is simple, well written and goes direct to the point. I love it!Get more detail about The Juice Fasting Bible: Discover the Power of an All-Juice Diet to Restore Good Health, Lose Weight and Increase Vitality.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Purchase The House of Mondavi: The Rise and Fall of an American Wine Dynasty
Interesting family saga about The Mondavi family. I enjoyed the first half of the book but believe it should have been shortened by 50-100 pages. By the end of the book I was thinking too much detail about yet another disagreement/misstep. Sad that there was so much discord in the family. After reading the book I wish I could have met the charismatic Robert Mondavi.Get more detail about The House of Mondavi: The Rise and Fall of an American Wine Dynasty.
Order Cocktail Time (Sandra Lee Semi-Homemade)
Want some inspiration for your neighborhood cocktail party? Need to pep up your family gatherings? Then this is the book you have been waiting for! I have had this book for two weeks and I have already used countless recipes, and cocktail ideas....it has been a great friend during the winter holidays. Instead of the same old, same old, we have had lots of fun with this cookbook that is full of easy inspiration. Thanks for making my life easier Sandra Lee!Get more detail about Cocktail Time (Sandra Lee Semi-Homemade).
Sunday, February 7, 2010
Where To Buy In Search of Bacchus: Wanderings in the Wonderful World of Wine Tourism
George Taber's third book, "In Search of Bacchus" is a well-researched and well-traveled overview of 12 wine regions around the world, from Napa, which invented wine tourism, to the fledgling Republic of Georgia. In his groundbreaking "Judgment of Paris," Taber detailed the Napa pioneers of the 1960s. He doesn't recross that river here, but looks instead at those who got wine tourism started, people like Robert Mondavi, John Wright, and Nicolas Catena, who realized there was a business opportunity in selling more than just wine. It helps their cause that many wine-growing regions are in stunningly beautiful places that you'd visit just for the view.
At times "In Search of Bacchus" reads a bit dryly, but Taber has a keen eye for history and filtering in the things that matter most. Most fascinating to read was how South Africa has emerged in the post-apartheid world. Wine has a role in helping racial reconciliation in a nation with a difficult, painful, and often violent past. His description of the Rioja region was breathtaking for its food, architecture, scenery, and oh yeah, the wine. And I found myself laughing as Taber described bumbling through blending his own wine in Duoro, Portugal. The book makes me thirst to visit South Africa, New Zealand, and Spain.
Taber includes informal lessons and traveler's tips, though the book isn't a tourist guide like Fodor's or Rick Steves'. His five-page conclusion is worth the price of the book alone. He wrote, "So where in the world is the best wine tourism? Your next destination." Spain will definitely be on my destination list.
The audience for this book are people who drink wine already and want to explore wine regions. While obviously a wine enthusiast, Taber never claims expertise or promotes highfalutin tasting notes. He's a journalist, and he's best just recording the experience of visiting a place. His narrative appeals to many of us who are curious, rather than pretentious, about wine, and who want to travel the world to drink it. Get more detail about In Search of Bacchus: Wanderings in the Wonderful World of Wine Tourism.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
New Wine Lover's Companion, The
As a companion to Food Lovers Companion, it is a great reference especially to the "new" with wine.Get more detail about New Wine Lover's Companion, The.
Total Juicing (Plume) Review
I'm finding this book to be practical and straight forward. The well thought out format provides simple location to specific health care needs. It offers a wealth of information in layman's terms. For the new "juicer" this is a good resource for how to get started and educating yourself for better health. Counsel on food combinations to address certain health needs is well thought out. Discussions regarding types of juicers and care and maintance makes it an invaluable resource. Due to the publication date of the book, there have been advancements in the nutritional information which makes this resource limited, but valid just the same. I highly recommend this book to anyone. The author's own health and long life makes this book speak for itself.Get more detail about Total Juicing (Plume).
Friday, February 5, 2010
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Starting and Running a Winery Top Quality
Okay, first off, ignore the silly title. There are good "Complete Idiot's" and "Dummies" books and not so good ones. This is a good one. The best book, and certainly the most complete book, I've seen on the business side of starting a winery. I'd recommend other books on wine making (including the excellent The Way to Make Wine: How to Craft Superb Table Wines at Home which bridges the home winemaking and small winery divide) but if you're serious about a winery, going to a couple of books is hardly a major problem.
The book is well-written, clear, and informative. Alas, my recommendation would carry more weight if I've opened a winery and made a profit, but so far this book falls into the informational category for me.Get more detail about The Complete Idiot's Guide to Starting and Running a Winery.
The Oxford Companion to Wine, 3rd Edition This instant
The Oxford Companion To Wine - 3rd Edition is a complete encyclopedea of wine. All you need to know about wine is here in alphabetical order for quick and easy reference. A masterpiece for wine professionals and students alike.
Highly recommended.
Reno Spiteri, BBA.,MBA.,
Wine Professional.Get more detail about The Oxford Companion to Wine, 3rd Edition.
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Parker's Wine Buyer's Guide, 7th Edition: The Complete, Easy-to-Use Reference on Recent Vintages, Prices, and Ratings for More than 8,000 Wines from All the Major Wine Regions Immediately
I bought books on amazon many times,and receive the package from Hongkong,this time,it sent from the USA,so cool!Get more detail about Parker's Wine Buyer's Guide, 7th Edition: The Complete, Easy-to-Use Reference on Recent Vintages, Prices, and Ratings for More than 8,000 Wines from All the Major Wine Regions.
Windows on the World Complete Wine Course: 2008 Edition Best Quality
This book is helpful in that it quickly explains regions, varietals, and how to read labels. It's a good source for someone that needs to know such information. Filled with lots of good pictures and interesting fun facts.Get more detail about Windows on the World Complete Wine Course: 2008 Edition.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Tasting Beer: An Insider's Guide to the World's Greatest Drink Get it now!
Before I review Randy Mosher's "Tasting Beer: An Insider's Guide to the World's Greatest Drink," let me give you a few calibration points so you can decide whether to take my opinions seriously or not. I definitely qualify as a serious beer geek. My travels around the U.S. always involve visits to brewpubs. I'll drive hundreds of miles out of my way to have a good craft brew, and I attend as many beer festivals each year as I possibly can. My favorite beers are Imperial stouts, barleywines and Imperial I.P.A.s, such as Alesmith's Speedway, Stone's Old Guardian and Moylan's Hopsickle (among many others). I enjoy the occasional Belgian (the funkier the better), and I consider Fat Tire to be an overly hyped "training-wheels beer" for people who don't know any better. I wouldn't drink a Bud, Coors or Miller if I were dying of thirst, and (yes, it's true) I tend to be a little snobbish toward people who are unwilling to expand their beer tastes beyond the Big Three. So, with that said, what did I think of "Tasting Beer?"
Well, there's a remarkable amount of information in its 247 pages, all of it presented in a very nicely integrated text-and-picture form. No matter what aspect of beer culture you're interested in, you'll find it covered to a useful level of detail in "Tasting Beer." Do you want to know more about the history of beer? It's in there, from 10,000 years BCE to the present, in a fascinating 22-page section. Do you want to improve your abilities to taste beer, and to accurately describe its qualities and complexity? It's in there--you'll learn how to distinguish 25 common flavors such as diacetyl, isoamyl acetate and fusels, and whether they're desirable or not. Are you interested in becoming more sophisticated in pairing beer with food? It's in there, both general guidelines and specific recommendations. Do you want to bone up on the bewildering variety of beer styles available? They're all in there, from the lightest adjunct lagers to Imperial stouts. Each style is described and characterized in great detail, including suggestions for which beers you should try that best represent the styles. There's a whole chapter on the modern American craft beer movement and its new styles such as wet-hopped ales, ultra-strong beers and other experimental types. I found the charts showing beer color, strength, etc., as a function of style to be especially interesting and useful, although all of the graphics and figures are exceptionally well done.
"Tasting Beer" is the best single volume of beer lore that I've read in many years. It is so good that a few of my other older beer books became redundant and have now found their way into the public library donation box. There should still be a place in the beer lover's inventory for such books as Roger Protz's "The Ale Trail" and Garrett Oliver's "The Brewmaster's Table: Discovering the Pleasures of Real Beer with Real Food." But if you own only one beer book, "Tasting Beer: An Insider's Guide to the World's Greatest Drink," should be it. Cheers!
Get more detail about Tasting Beer: An Insider's Guide to the World's Greatest Drink.
The Wine Trials: 100 Everyday Wines Under $15 that Beat $50 to $150 Wines in Brown-Bag Blind Tastings Buy Now
Clearly blind tasting is the only even semi-scientific way of evaluating wine. We should value wines that we like, that taste good, rather than for nebulous qualities of their reputation and label. The fact that wine critics are not much better at identifying good wine than we are is a disturbing fact. And the shameful overpricing of wine in the United States, both with the government-mandated middle-men and the restaurant multiplying level, is a crime. Who could imagine spending $20 for a bottle of wine in Spain or Italy? Or that amount for anything but an old Bordeaux in France? Yet that's the bottom, the two buck chuck, of the US restaurant wine pricing.
Anyway, philosophy and overall guidance aside, this guidebook isn't all that useful. It highlights a scattering of good wines (to someone's taste) at a good (sub $15) price point and they are supposed to be widely available wines as well. The first ones I tried though were nothing special at all, and nearly all of my inexpensive standbys were missing from the book. With that lack of luck, I've moved on. Good wine ideas but only so-so on the guidebook side of things.Get more detail about The Wine Trials: 100 Everyday Wines Under $15 that Beat $50 to $150 Wines in Brown-Bag Blind Tastings.
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Brew Like a Monk: Trappist, Abbey, and Strong Belgian Ales and How to Brew Them Order Now
This book is filled with history and information on trappist beers and is a delightful look into brewing. So for the Belgian beer lover who wants to know more about the history and origin of their favorite beers, it's amazing.Get more detail about Brew Like a Monk: Trappist, Abbey, and Strong Belgian Ales and How to Brew Them.
Wine and War: The French, the Nazis, and the Battle for France's Greatest Treasure Decide Now
Our book group read this book and we all found it fascinating. Although there was a lot of hardship and tragedy, the spirit of the people was wonderful!Get more detail about Wine and War: The French, the Nazis, and the Battle for France's Greatest Treasure.
Monday, February 1, 2010
The Big Book of Juices: More Than 400 Natural Blends for Health and Vitality Every Day Right now
The principle behind food combining is that different food classes require different enzymes, different rates of digestion, and different digestive pH for proper digestion. If the foods of the different food classes are combined incorrectly, the specific requirements for their proper digestion tend to cancel each other. For example, flesh foods require an acid media for digestion, whereas milk is highly alkaline, so it can neutralize the acid required for digesting the flesh foods. Fruit digestion results in the release of an alkaline secretion, which neutralizes the acid secretions, needed for protein digestion. Because of this, it is not a good idea to eat fruits and proteins at the same meals. Some foods are digested faster than others. If fast-digesting foods like fruits are held up in the digestive system for a longer time than necessary through being combined with foods that digest more slowly, fermentation takes place. For this reason, it is good for digestion to eat fruit and starches, which are digested slowly at different meals. Fruits and vegetables require different digestive enzymes, which tend to neutralize each other, so these too are best taken at separate meals. The simplest rule of food combining is to eat foods or combinations of foods that in our direct experience are easiest to digest. It is usually easy to digest foods from the same food group or from two compatible food groups. Vegetables should be eaten with protein meals and carb meals. However, too much of even a single food is taxing on the digestive system. Easy to digest combinations include predigested proteins with vegetables or sweet or sub acid fruits.
Sprouted grains and vegetables, vegetables and low starches, and high and low starches are all generally easy to digest. Relatively easy to digest food combinations to explore are protein and leafy greens, and avocado combined with leafy greens, acid, or sub acid fruits. Combinations that are likely to produce purification and fermentation are protein and starches, oil and protein, protein and sweet or sub acid fruit, oil and sweet or sub acid fruit, fruit and vegetables, and melons with any other type of food. For some people these combinations may not be a problem if eaten in small amounts. Papaya and lemons go well with any other foods. The timing of eating foods is also important. If you are having a salad and a protein, by eating the salad first, the hydrochloric acid needed for digesting the protein is blocked. There is better digestion if we eat the salad after the protein or while eating the protein. Also, it is best to not drink cold liquids with your meals, as this causes the blood vessels in the stomach to constrict, resulting in indigestion. The way we tell if our combinations or timing are good for us is through results. If we get gas, constipation, diarrhea, and feel bloated, nauseated, and enervated after eating, we have a clue that what we are eating is not digesting easily and that we need to pay more attention to food combining or food excesses. It is hard to enjoy the flow of the cosmic energies and the peace of meditation when fermenting indigestion is raging inside our stomach and bowels. The key to an easy time with food combining awareness is to experiment in developing a routine of eating in which we eat what is easy to digest. In other words, trust your own experience and use your intelligence to make life easy.
Mixing starches and proteins leads to disease states. Simple rules follow:
Sugars and starches cannot be eaten with proteins and acid fruits at the same meal.
The large part of the diet should consist of vegetables, salads and fruit. Proteins, fats and starches should be eaten in small amounts
All refined and processed foods should be eliminated, and only whole grains should be used.
An interval of at least four hours should elapse between meals.
The first rule of good digestion and assimilation of protein is: Do not mix major portions of protein and starch at the same meal.
If protein is eaten with too many carbohydrates (bread, crackers, potato, rice, pasta) or with fruit (sugar), digestion is severely compromised. Consequently, the body becomes a breeding ground for bacteria in the gastro-intestinal tract. Moreover, such a combination contributes to higher levels of cholesterol. Eating Proteins with carbohydrates is a major cause of cholesterol problems. Perhaps one reason why cow's milk causes so many allergies is that it is a protein and carbohydrate (sugar) combination.
Separating these two types of food is one of the first steps to being free of allergies. The digestion of protein and carbohydrates are physiologically separate and conflicting functions. The protein is digested in an acid medium which means that the enzymes function in an acid environment. Combining protein and carbohydrates (digested in an alkaline medium) impairs the proper digestion of one or the other food. Historical and current observations show that the body opts for the digestion of the carbohydrates if both foods are present, perhaps after the principle of a "path of least resistance." Or the body opts for the digestion of the carbohydrates in mixed meals to meet immediate energy and survival needs. In this way, the body will function effectively and will be able to obtain proteins at another time.
When carbohydrates (starches) are eaten, the digestive system sends forth alkaline or neutral gastric juices, such as amylase which is most efficient at an alkaline pH of 7.1 - 7.2. However, when proteins are eaten, the digestive system sends out acid gastric juices at a pH of 3, for example. If these food groups are eaten simultaneously, the gastric juices (if both are provided) cancel each other out and poor digestion results. Anything that inhibits digestion is an enemy of health. But the body is concerned with conservation of energy and does not send for conflicting digestive enzymes. Protein digestive enzymes are much more costly to the body to manufacture. If both protein and carbohydrate are eaten simultaneously, the body may only respond to the easier carbohydrate digestive process and let the protein pass through. This results in poor absorption of amino acids and poisoning of the body due to putrefying/decaying protein (i.e. rotting meat in the intestines). When a food is chewed, the ptylin or amylase enzymes in the saliva begin processing the carbohydrates.
If carbohydrates are prevalent, a signal is sent via the hypothalamus to the pancreas to produce more alkaline amylase enzymes to further process carbohydrate food. If protein is prevalent, the signal is sent to the pancreas to produce more protease enzymes to process the protein. The pancreas mass-produces one or the other enzyme at a time. if both proteins and carbohydrates are eaten simultaneously. The pancreas opts for pancreatic amylase (the easier enzyme to produce) for the digestion of carbohydrates and neglects the protein digestion. Usually, some carbohydrates will be eaten in any protein meal, because the vegetables so strongly advocated as absolutely essential in a protein meal contain carbohydrates. We can also add a tortilla or a few croĆ»tons to the meal and not exceed the body's ability to digest the protein. If the carbohydrates are less than 18% by volume, the body can still recognize the focus of the meal as protein and digest it accordingly. Some protein foods and some vegetables become starches when cooked for an extended period of time or at high temperatures, particularly above 200° F. Those foods include beans, corn and peas. Although dry or sprouted beans and peas are proteins, they become starches when cooked. Always have vegetables with a protein meal. In fact, if you wish to live long and vitally, you will have organic vegetables with every meal.
Fruit
Fruit, more than any other food, brings to the body the "essence of the seasons" or the particular minerals and enzymes for the body to adapt to the change of seasons. Fruit is considered by many health experts to be the ideal food because of its ease of digestion, high water content, rich supply of living enzymes and organic minerals, and general cleansing effect. Fruit can add a vital dimension to a person's diet. As a rule, fruit for breakfast as a way of life is detrimental in the long run. The reason is as follows: During the latter part of a person's sleep cycle the body is in an alkaline state. During this alkaline pH state, the best sleep, best dreaming and best body repairs take place. Then the body heads for its acid pH swing, which brings the activity and productivity of morning. The acid side is required for enthusiasm and energy, just as the day follows the night. But if fruit is eaten first thing in the morning, it pushes the body back toward an alkaline pH when the natural body cycle is heading for a more acid swing. This inhibits the digestive activity of future meals. It tranquilizes the brain leading to low productivity and the use of stimulants (coffee, tea, tobacco, refined carbohydrates) to bring energy to the body. And by inhibiting the acid pH cycle, fruit pushes the alkaline cycle further into alkalosis, thus contributing to greater stress on the blood sugar. Because of its high sugar content, fruit generally appears in the carbohydrate family, but it actually falls into a class of its own dietary. A general dietary rule regarding fruit is to eat it by itself.Get more detail about The Big Book of Juices: More Than 400 Natural Blends for Health and Vitality Every Day.
Lowest Price The Way to Make Wine: How to Craft Superb Table Wines at Home
If your interested in some of the more technical details of crafting fine wines then this book is for you.Get more detail about The Way to Make Wine: How to Craft Superb Table Wines at Home.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)