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Books > Health, Home & Family > Cookery / food & drink etc > Beverages > Alcoholic beverages
The Cocktail Garden offers cocktail recipes focused around the
flavours and produce found throughout the seasons, all stunningly
illustrated by internationally renowned artist Adriana Picker. From
summery raspberries and rich figs to citrus and white peaches,
apples and pineapples, and infusions using a riot of herbs - basil
and thyme, to sage and lavender and other flavours found in the
garden. There are drinks for long hot summer afternoons spent among
flowers in the garden; wine spritzers for breezy evenings on the
back porch; champagne cocktails for celebrations under the apple
tree; nightcaps for wintry nights by the fireside; and fruity party
punches for that garden party gathering with style.
Winner, TopShelf Magazine Book Awards Historical Non-fiction
Finalist, Northern California Book Awards General Non-Fiction Look.
Smell. Taste. Judge. Crush is the 200-year story of the heady dream
that wines as good as the greatest of France could be made in
California. A dream dashed four times in merciless succession until
it was ultimately realized in a stunning blind tasting in Paris. In
that tasting, in the year of America's bicentennial, California
wines took their place as the leading wines of the world. For the
first time, Briscoe tells the complete and dramatic story of the
ascendancy of California wine in vivid detail. He also profiles the
larger story of California itself by looking at it from an entirely
innovative perspective, the state seen through its singular wine
history. With dramatic flair and verve, Briscoe not only recounts
the history of wine and winemaking in California, he encompasses a
multidimensional approach that takes into account an array of
social, political, cultural, legal, and winemaking sources.
Elements of this history have plot lines that seem scripted by a
Sophocles, or Shakespeare. It is a fusion of wine, personal
histories, cultural, and socioeconomic aspects. Crush is the story
of how wine from California finally gained its global due. Briscoe
recounts wine's often fickle affair with California, now several
centuries old, from the first harvest and vintage, through the four
overwhelming catastrophes, to its amazing triumph in Paris.
In Gin, Jesus, and Jim Crow, Brendan J. J. Payne reveals how
prohibition helped realign the racial and religious order in the
South by linking restrictions on alcohol with political preaching
and the disfranchisement of Black voters. While both sides invoked
Christianity, prohibitionists redefined churches' doctrines,
practices, and political engagement. White prohibitionists
initially courted Black voters in the 1880s but soon dismissed them
as hopelessly wet and sought to disfranchise them, stoking fears of
drunken Black men defiling white women in their efforts to reframe
alcohol restriction as a means of racial control. Later, as the
alcohol industry grew desperate, it turned to Black voters, many of
whom joined the brewers to preserve their voting rights and
maintain personal liberties. Tracking southern debates about
alcohol from the 1880s through the 1930s, Payne shows that
prohibition only retreated from the region once the racial and
religious order it helped enshrine had been secured.
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