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Books > Food & Drink > Beverages
Wine Unfiltered is a friendly, charming, and beautifully
illustrated introduction to the world of natural wine -- where to
buy it, what it tastes like, how to share it, and why it
matters.What makes a wine 'natural'? And why does it matter? In
Wine, Unfiltered Katherine Clary, author and creator of the Wine
Zine, tackles these questions and many more -- like the difference
between organic and biodynamic wines, and whether natural varieties
really prevent hangovers -- to give readers a holistic picture of
the thriving world of natural wine. From grape varietals and
legendary figures to the best way to navigate an unfamiliar wine
shop, this accessible, witty book is an irresistible exploration of
the cutting edge of wine. Perfect for both natural wine novices and
seasoned drinkers, Wine Unfiltered offers an unpretentious look at
what makes natural wine so special. Sections on growing regions,
building your own wine cellar, and how to taste a 'living wine'
will impart readers with the confidence to finally explain what
natural wine is at a party, ask a sommelier a question at a
restaurant, or convince a reluctant family member to make the
switch from conventional to natural wine. Vital information and
nuanced opinions are broken out into digestible bites, alongside
bold illustrations, in this essential read for anyone interested in
the rapidly expanding world of natural wines.
The story of bourbon production is a tale of American innovation,
industry, and craft. Join photographer Carol Peachee on a visual
journey from farm to bottle, with stunning images of the
distilleries, farms, copper, brass, and steel works, cooperages and
stave mills, and barrel warehouses that transform corn into liquid
gold, while former Maker's Mark President Bill Samuels Jr. and
whiskey historian Carolyn Brooks trace the impact of historical
industries and production methods on the modern bourbon brand. From
the ruins and rusted machinery of early distilleries to the flames
of a modern barrel factory, 280 full-color photographs of Straight
Bourbon offer a rare glimpse into the creation of America's native
spirit.
In the twelfth century the abbots of Burton began to produce beer.
The dissolution of the abbey in the sixteenth century saw inns and
alehouses appear, with many selling beer brewed on-site. The first
recognisable brewery was Benjamin Printon's, which was established
on Horninglow Street around 1708. The Trent & Mersey Canal,
built in 1774/75, allowed further expansion to the industry, but it
was the coming of the railway in 1839 that led to massive growth -
by 1888 there were thirty-one breweries employing over 8,000 men
and producing over 3 million barrels a year. In this collection of
images, local author and historian Terry Garner illustrates the
history of this famous east Staffordshire town and provides a
fascinating insight into the many lost breweries that made
Burton-on-Trent the brewing capital of the world.
Real ale and other craft beers have become increasingly popular
over the past few years, and as a result more people have been
compelled to try making their own homebrew. However, while the
concept behind making beer is simple, the execution can at times
seem complex and confusing. The key to bridging the gap between
brewing in theory and practise is being able to spot the signs of
trouble and know how to respond. CAMRA's Home-Brewing Problem
Solver provides the information you need to nip problems in the bud
- and, better still, to avoid them in the first place.
Including a 64-page book, gin infuser, metal spirit measure and
cocktail stirrers, this tin will inspire you to try new craft gins
and become a gin expert!
The original India Pale Ale was pure gold in a glass; a
semi-mythical beer specially invented, in the 19th century, to
travel halfway around the world, through storms and tropical
sunshine, and arrive in perfect condition for a long, cold drink on
an Indian verandah. But although you can still buy beers with 'IPA'
on the label they are, to be frank, a pale imitation of the
original. For the first time in 140 years, a keg of Burton IPA has
been brewed with the original recipe for a voyage to India by canal
and tall ship, around the Cape of Good Hope; and the man carrying
it is the award-winning Pete Brown, Britain's best beer write.
Brazilian pirates and Iranian customs officials lie ahead, but will
he even make it that far, have fallen in the canal just a few miles
out of Burton? And if Pete does make it to the other side of the
world with 'Barry' the barrel, one question remains: what will the
real IPA taste like? Weaving first-class travel writing with
assured comedy, Hops and Glory is both a rollicking, raucous
history of the Raj and a wonderfully entertaining, groundbreaking
experiment to recreate the finest beer ever produced.
Mountainous terrain, volcanic soils, innumerable microclimates, and
an ancient culture of winemaking influenced by Greeks, Phoenicians,
and Romans make Italy the most diverse country in the world of
wine. This diversity is reflected in the fact that Italy grows the
largest number of native wine grapes known, amounting to more than
a quarter of the world's commercial wine grape types. Ian D'Agata
spent thirteen years interviewing producers, walking vineyards,
studying available research, and tasting wines to create this
authoritative guide to Italy's native grapes and their wines.
Writing with great enthusiasm and deep knowledge, D'Agata discusses
more than five hundred different native Italian grape varieties,
from Aglianico to Zibibbo.
D'Agata provides details about how wine grapes are identified and
classified, what clones are available, which soils are ideal, and
what genetic evidence tells us about a variety's parentage. He
gives historical and anecdotal accounts of each grape variety and
describes the characteristics of wines made from the grape. A
regional list of varieties and a list of the best producers provide
additional guidance. Comprehensive, thoroughly researched, and
engaging, this book is the perfect companion for anyone who wants
to know more about the vast enological treasures cultivated in
Italy.
A Field Guide to Whisky is a one-stop guide for all the information
a whisky enthusiast needs. With the whisky market booming all over
the world, now is a perfect time for a comprehensive guide to this
popular brown spirit. What are the basic ingredients in all
whiskies? How does it get its flavour? Which big-name brands truly
deserve their reputation? What are the current whisky trends around
the world? And who was Jack Daniel, anyway? This abundance of
information is distilled(!) into 323 short entries covering basic
whisky literacy, production methods, consumption tips, trends,
trivia, geographical maps and lists of distilleries, whisky trails,
bars, hotels, and festivals by an industry insider. Boasting 230
colour photographs and a beautiful package to boot, A Field Guide
to Whisky will make a whisky expert out of anyone.
Winefulness is the new mindfulness.
Cancel the hot yoga and pick up a cool Pinot Grigio - sometimes all you
need is a nice glass of wine. Through the good times and the bad, it's
always there to pick you up and it's always got your back. So enjoy
this collection of wine wisdom for the soul, and learn to view the
world through rosé-tinted glasses.
As the old saying goes, where there's a wine there's a way.
Includes inspiration such as:
- It isn't wise to keep things bottled up
- No Champagne, no gain
- Life is a Cabernet, after all
- Every cloud has a Syrah lining
- Do things for the right Rieslings
This title offers fresh recipes for fitness, detox and raw power.
This title presents fantastically fresh ways to serve up vegetable
vitality in a glass, from healthy detox juices to delectable
fruit-and-vegetable fusions or classic coolers. You can energize
first thing with Carrot and Ginger Crush or Fennel Fusion, and
enjoy daytime delights including Ruby Roots, Mixed Salad Soother or
Avocado Cleanser. You can relax at night with chilled-out treats
such as Spicy Bloody Mary, Cinnamon Squash or Cucumber, Kiwi and
Stem Ginger Spritzer. It offers full advice on choosing and
preparing ingredients, and how to use different juicing and
blending equipment, plus expert tips on boosting nutritional value,
maximizing taste and serving drinks with style. 150 photographs
accompany the step-by-step techniques. Nutritional information is
provided for every drink. With juice bars springing up on every
corner, it seems the demand for all-natural, high-energy drinks has
never been greater. Raw vegetable juices score highly for being low
in sugar and packed with nutrients. Amazingly versatile, these
blends can be made from almost any vegetable you can think of. This
superb collection makes the very best of a wide variety of
vegetables, from tomatoes, carrots and squashes to fresh greens and
shoots. Leafy herbs and spices add taste and zing, while
firmed-bodied fruits and the odd squeeze of citrus make perfect
partners for many of the vegetables. There are ideas here for
breakfast boosters, midday medleys and inspired evening blends.
Some of these classic coolers will make excellent non-alcoholic
alternatives for dinner parties and outdoor gatherings.
Step-by-step techniques are accompanied by 150 photographs, and
there are plenty of tips and variations to help and inspire you.
"Associations and societies such as the Bordeaux Club are the very
acme of civilization. Botticelli and Bach were engaged in the
eternal quest for truth and beauty in painting and music, and the
Bordeaux Club did the same for viniculture." - Andrew Roberts The
story of 12 friends who gathered to share and celebrate the
extraordinary wines of Bordeaux. Like-minded in their love of wine,
they differed wildly (often alarmingly!) in their personal wealth,
life and circumstances - their opinions, always voiced, had the
power to ignite anger and divide friendships just as easily as they
bound them together. Neil McKendrick, member and minute-taker for
57 of the Club's 70 extraordinary years, weaves the tale of this
convivial group with the rigour of a Cambridge academic (he is
ex-Master of Gonville and Caius) and the humour of a born
raconteur. Alongside the likes of Hugh Johnson, Steven Spurrier and
Michael Broadbent, he celebrates the beauty of top-class Bordeaux
and the splendour of each setting - from glorious country park to
rickety Dickensian boardroom - in which these men were lucky enough
to dine, serving up memories of vintages the like of which we will
never see again.
If you love wine, this book will give you all the knowledge and
self-confidence you need to become a world-class wine taster. It
reveals in methodical steps exactly how to acquire essential
wine-tasting skills. Cees (it's pronounced 'Case') van Casteren is
a brilliant scientist, author, and international wine competition
judge, as well as one of the global super-elite (less than 500 top
experts worldwide) who have been able to earn the supreme title,
Master of Wine. Anyone Can Taste Wine first appeared in Dutch and
instantly established itself in the Netherlands as far and away the
most authoritative and popular book on the subject. From the book's
introductory chapter: "Many people typically believe that the
ability to taste comes from some kind of inborn, innate aptitude-as
though 'taste' were a genetic hand-me-down-something that you
either have, or you don't have. But that's not true. "Wine tasting
is a skill. Anyone can taste wine, as long as they have normally
functioning senses of smell and taste. Anyone (that is) who is
motivated to learn and practice-a lot-can become a good wine
taster. Genes or no genes. "Much of this skill will involve
awareness of how to train your senses. While there are genetic
differences between humans in terms of smelling and tasting, these
innate differences do not make one taster better than another.
Research by taste professor Linda Bartoshuk, previously at the
University of Yale, has shown that a wine taster's ability to taste
is mainly due to the amount of training that the taster has
experienced. Specifically, exercises dedicated to recognizing wine
scents and developing an attendant wine language are the main
contributing factors in developing wine tasting abilities. The
difficulty that most besets inexperienced tasters is a lack of
suitable vocabulary that would enable them to name and describe the
flavors and scents that they taste and smell. This vital skill,
being able to describe flavors and aromas in words, remains a
common problem, even for the most experienced of wine tasters.
According to Professor Tim Jacob of Cardiff University, a method
that will enable you to associate smells and flavors with a
suitable repertoire of words will contribute greatly to the
enhancement of tasting skills . . . that is . . . you just need a
method. The more user-friendly, the easier it will be to learn and
remember. And that's exactly what I realized at the start of my
Master of Wine studies. The method had to be user-friendly in order
to help me to remember all relevant aspects for tasting,
describing, and analyzing the wine. In search of these aspects, I
started with . . . the wine itself. With this fascinating blend of
water (colorless, odorless, tasteless), alcohol (colorless,
odorless, slightly sweet), acids, sugars, pigments, aromas, and
tannins which together give wine its color, smell, and taste. "And
I was quite quick to learn that this very curious and complex
combination of color, aromas, alcohol, acids, sugars and tannins
actually were the 'relevant aspects' I was looking for, and
therefore the targets of my attention while developing a method.
The answer to my quest was indeed in the wine itself!"
The blender now has a permanent spot on kitchen counters in no
small part due to the rise of smoothies as a snack fave. Strawberry
is the most popular smoothie flavor, while chocolate is the
milkshake fave. Although most smoothies share banana as a common
ingredient, for milkshakes, it's, well, milk! (Though that milk
might be in the form of ice cream.) Whether you're having your
smoothie as part of breakfast or as a snack, and whether your shake
is a treat or a dessert, grab a straw and enjoy.
Why drink Bordeaux when you can make your own Buddha's Hand Cherry
Bomb wine? Feeling spunky? Try some Ginger Squash Sake! Or maybe
you're in the mood for some Strawberry Lemon-Guava, Triple Basil,
Pomegranate Citrus-Symphony, or Cherry Black Currant wine. These
are just a taste of the 148 unique recipes in this creative guide
to small-batch winemaking that goes far beyond specialty grapes for
an easier, more forgiving process. Readers learn how to make wines
with fruits like lemons, blueberries, cherries, peaches, and pears,
as well as flowers like dandelions and roses, and even herbs like
rosemary, basil, and even cannabis. And these recipes are just the
start; readers will gain the skills they need to branch out,
incorporate their favourite ingredients, and create their own
unique wine flavours.
Get hoppin' with this guide to microbrewing your own beer Thinking
of brewing your own beer or want to know how it's done? Homebrewing
For Dummies is for you. If you're ready to take a crack at making
your own brew, you'll need this guide to the supplies, ingredients,
and process of crafting the perfect beer. Follow our recipes for
lager, porter, stout, and other brew types--or invent your own.
When you've tasted your perfect creation (and after the hangover
wears off), we've got you covered with ideas for entering your beer
into homebrewing competitions and selling your beer. This new
edition keeps pace with the exciting world of small-batch beer,
introducing you to new flavors and varieties that are popular on
the microbrew circuit. We've also got the details on the latest
at-home brewing equipment, software and apps, and resources you can
tap (get it?) to make a better beer. Not an IPA person? Not to
worry! You can also make your own hard seltzers, flavored malt
beverages, and juice drinks with this handy how-to. Get recipes and
instructions for brewing lagers, porters, and other beers at home
Enhance the quality of your small-batch brews and make your
operations more eco friendly Enter homebrewing competitions with
your beer, hard seltzer, and malt beverages Discover new gadgets,
apps, and resources that can make home brewing even easier
Homebrewing For Dummies is for anyone looking for a fun and
easy-to-use guide to the exciting, rewarding, and refreshing hobby
of beer brewing.
"A great primer. . . . If you're new to the
natural/organic/biodynamic wine debates, Authentic Wine is the
place to start."--Huffington Post
"This is one of the most engaging, thoughtful and enlightening
books on contemporary wine. . . . A manifesto for an industry
looking to shape its future."--Wine And Spirits
Naturalness is a hot topic in the wine world. But what exactly is a
"natural wine"? For this pioneering book, best-selling wine writer
Jamie Goode teams up with winemaker and Master of Wine Sam Harrop
to explore the wide range of issues surrounding authenticity in
wine. They begin by emphasizing that wine's diversity, one of its
strengths, is currently under threat from increasingly homogenized
commercial wines that lack a sense of place. Drawing on a global
array of examples and anecdotes, Goode and Harrop examine complex
concepts--terroir, biodynamics, and sustainability--in clear
language. They also discuss topics including cultured and wild
yeasts, wine "faults," the carbon footprint of the wine industry,
"natural" as a marketing concept, and more. "Authentic Wine"
illuminates a subject of great interest to wine producers,
consumers, and anyone wondering where the wine industry is
headed.
Award-winning cocktail recipes from the world's very best
mixologists! If you are looking to mix some of the most inspired
creations ever developed, the drinks that have swept up the global
awards for the last 20 years, the creations of some of the most
skilled and inspirational mixologists ever to grace the bars of the
world, then this book is for you. 101 Award-Winning Cocktails is a
truly unique offering for the cocktail book genre. Each recipe is
an award-winning creation from one of the world's top cocktail
mixologists, accompanied by the mixologist's profile, the story
behind the creation of their recipes, the competition won and a
'from-the-horse's-mouth' guide to recreating their fabulous mixes.
Along with stunning full colour photographs of each drink, this
book opens the door to the hitherto unseen world of the greatest
mixologists, sharing for the first time ever, the very finest,
award-winning cocktail creations, from the world's most talented
bartending superstars. Written and compiled by Paul Martin, himself
a multiple champion and cocktail mixing world-record holder. Paul
has drawn on the pool of incredible cocktail mixing talent that has
made up his global social circle over the last 30 years. It is his
own relationship with these giants of the cocktail world that has
led to them sharing their amazing, revered recipes with the general
public for the first time ever.
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