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Books > Health, Home & Family > Cookery / food & drink etc > Beverages > Alcoholic beverages
"Although he logged thousands of miles in the preparation of
this guide, what Jay Brooks really brings to the table is a
lifetime steeped in California craft beer. As I've learned through
the years, when Jay tells you where to go and what to drink there,
you're wise to listen closely." --Stephen Beaumont, coauthor of
"The World Atlas of Beer" (with Tim Webb)
- The definitive guide to the region's 161 breweries and
brewpubs
- Each brewery profile includes types of beer brewed at each
site, special features, available tours, and the author's pick of
the best beer to try
- Covers the Central Coast area around Santa Cruz north to the
border of Oregon, including San Francisco, San Jose, and
Sacramento
Few writers have earned Dorothy Parker's reputation for drinking as
much or as hard, and fewer still have achieved her notorious skill
at wisecracking wit. Kevin C. Fitzpatrick, president of the Dorothy
Parker Society, gives us an intoxicating new look at the doyenne of
the ripping riposte through the lens she most preferred: the bottom
of a glass. A bar book for Parker enthusiasts and literary tipplers
alike, "Under the Table" offers a unique take on Parker, the
infamous Algonquin Round Table, and the Jazz Age by profiling and
celebrating the drinks that she, her bitter friends, and sweetest
enemies enjoyed and discussed. Each entry of this delicious
compendium offers a fascinating and lively background of a period
cocktail, its ingredients, and the characters associated with it.
The book also features a special selection of twenty-first century
speakeasy-style recipes from top mixologists from across the
country. A complete recipe with detailed instructions forms the
centerpiece of each entry, and topping it off are illuminating
excerpts from Parker's poems, stories, and other writings that will
allow you to enjoy her world from the speakeasies of New York City
to the watering holes of Hollywood.
"Just as the Pilgrim fathers brewed their first batches of beer in
Massachusetts, so too were Massachusetts brewing pioneers in the
forefront of the craft brewing revolution. With this guidebook in
hand, you can embark on a rich treasure trail reflecting the true
state of American craft brewing in the early twenty-first century."
--Tony Forder, Publisher, "Ale Street News"
- The definitive guide to Massachusetts's 46 breweries and
brewpubs
- Types of beer brewed at each site and the authoris pick of the
best beer to try
- Information on tours, takeout, and food for each brewery
- New and updated edition of the bestselling guide to
Pennsylvania's 73 breweries and brewpubs
- History of brewing in the state
- Full information for travelers, such as lodging, nearby points
of interest, and recommended bars in the area
- Each profile includes types of beer brewed at the site,
available tours, food served, and the author's "Pick" of the best
beer to try
- Includes special sections on hotel bars, brewing beer, beer
traveling, regional foods, and beer festivals
Drink deliciously and magickally with this exquisite compendium of
potent mystical beverages, with witchy wisdom from author Shawn
Engel and expertly crafted cocktails from mixologist Steven
Nichols. For thousands of years, witches young and old have
concocted mysterious potions to heal, to divine the future, to get
in touch with the energies of the planet-and just to have fun. In
this enchanting compendium of 40 drink recipes, mystical maven
Shawn Engel shares her thoughts on what to imbibe for power,
energy, and amusement. Written in tandem with the award-winning
cocktail writer and developer Steven Nichols, this collection
presents a broad range of drinks for every purpose. Whether it's a
trio of beverages celebrating the energies of the maiden, mother,
and crone (with notes of pomegranate, fig, and smoke respectively),
or an eminently sippable mint-based money magick brew for
prosperity, this book is a party with a purpose. Not only are these
drinks fun and shareable, they also contain ingredients with
ancient magickal significance. For example, the 'Keep it Hexy' is
not only a delicious vodka-based cocktail perfect for kick-starting
a memorable evening, it also contains black pepper to return a hex
to sender, sage to cleanse an evil eye, and blackberries for
protection. All recipes include energetic properties and plenty of
information about magickal ingredients and why they've been used to
address certain ills for millennia; some even come with invocations
and rituals to amplify their power.
Once upon a time in America there was a gentleman named Charles
Christopher Mueller, who published, in 1934, seven little volumes
titled Pioneers of Mixing at Elite Bars. He wasn't alone, his three
compatriots--Al Hoppe, A V Guzman, and James Cunningham--compiled
the recipes they shook and stirred at 30 bars around the US before
Prohibition. They had met in 1906, at the height of the cocktail's
Golden Age. In this compilation there is a recipe for a
Cosmopolitan Daisy made with raspberry syrup and gin instead of
cranberry juice and vodka There's only one problem in reading
vintage cocktail books. Some of the ingredients are no longer
available and need to be replaced with a focus on maintaining the
original flavour profile as closely as can be practically managed.
This can take years when you are working through 1,374 recipes:
That is how many drinks this compilation contains. That is why
award-winning London mixologist Myles Davies scoured through the
contents and annotated everything including the spirits
descriptions to give you, the reader, an opportunity to play with
less pressure. So now it's time to stroll through pre-Prohibition
American cocktails with the four gentlemen known as the American
Traveling Mixologists and their British sidekick. Don't just stop
at the Cosmopolitan Daisy. There are plenty of jewels in this
treasure chest.
The brewing history of Toronto is as rich and complex as the many
beers produced in the city's breweries. Many of these breweries
still exist, but dozens have been lost to time or development. Take
a look back at these historically and culturally significant
breweries and discover the influence they had on the city's past.
Beer expert and author Jordan St. John details the stories of
sixteen beer makers, from the locations of the facilities to the
range of their offerings, and includes fascinating biographical
information on the prominent brewers who were also notable members
of Toronto society -- John Doel, Eugene O'Keefe, and Enoch Turner,
to name a few. This important new contribution to the city's
history is sure to be a fascinating exploration for beer
enthusiasts and history buffs alike.
A unique look at the meaning of the taste for wine in Britain, from
the establishment of a Commonwealth in 1649 to the Commercial
Treaty between Britain and France in 1860 - this book provides an
extraordinary window into the politics and culture of England and
Scotland just as they were becoming the powerful British state.
This important and extremely interesting book is a serious
scientific and authoritative overview of the implications of
drinking beer as part of the human diet. Coverage of this book
includes a history of beer in the diet, an overview of beer
production and beer compositional analysis, the impact of raw
materials, the desirable and undesirable components in beer and the
contribution of beer to health, and social issues. Written by
Professor Charlie Bamforth, well known for a lifetime's work in the
brewing world, "Beer: Health and Nutrition" should find a place on
the shelves of all those involved in providing dietary advice.
This is the second edition of the definitive analysis of the
international wine trade. This new edition focuses on individual
trade flows across the major importing and exporting countries,
examines the increasing role of food retailers in wine selling and
looks for the future trends which will shape the industry in the
new millennium.
The book begins by examining technical factors in the wine trade
giving rise to differences in pricing and considers how wines'
characteristics help to position the final products. It shows how
trends in consumption are changing in different ways in the
traditional and Anglo-Saxon markets and explains the effects of
developments in international trade such as the role of trade
barriers.
The heart of the book profiles the ten major wine importing
countries and considers: Trends in the consumption of alcoholic
drinksWine market and import patternsThe configuration of import
and distribution channelsEach country's trade policy with detailed
comparisons between themThe book then goes on to consider the wine
trade from the exporters point of view and describes: The challenge
posed by New World producers to those based in Western EuropeThe
influence of the previously planned economies of the former Soviet
blocThe role of the EU and the likely effect of further European
integrationThe influence of tariff schedules and the GATT
negotiationsThis edition will be essential reading for all wine
trade professionals including: wine producers, importers and
exporters, negocients, co-operatives and regional economic
development agencies, and wine merchants and retailers.
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