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Books > Health, Home & Family > Cookery / food & drink etc > Beverages > Alcoholic beverages > General
In 2003, the United States had about 60 craft distillers; today
there are over 2,000 in all corners of the country, 500 of which
are making whiskey. This book introduces the entrepreneurs and the
companies behind this American craft whiskey movement. Whiskey
Rebels is a collection of first-person accounts of the brilliant,
brave, and slightly crazy innovators responsible for changing the
whiskey landscape forever--people like Ralph Erenzo, recipient of
the first distilling license in New York State in 80 years who went
on to create Hudson Baby Bourbon; Nicole Austin, a prominent female
producer and vocal activist who brought an indie spirit to the
renowned American whiskey region of Tennessee through George Dickel
Tennessee Whisky; and Bill Owens, who founded the American
Distilling Institute in 2003. Spirits pro and award-winning author
John McCarthy (The Modern Gentleman) has conducted hundreds of
hours of interviews to gather these fascinating first-person
accounts and give readers an amusing and thorough insight into the
world of American craft whiskey. Under his expert guidance, readers
will also learn the requirements to be considered a craft whiskey
distiller, the effect of the craft beer movement on modern craft
distilling, why craft distillers hate the word craft, and many
other pieces of insider information.
ALCOHOL CAN BE GOOD FOR YOU!
In this uniquely Japanese mix of quirky fun and hard science, alcohol
is revealed not as a poison, but as the best of all medicines . . . up
to a point. If we drink healthily, drinkers need never give up what we
love.
Kaori Haishi is a journalist and the director of the Japan Saké
Association; Dr Shinichi Asabe is a liver specialist who likes a drink.
Together they interview a line-up of twenty-five booze-loving
physicians, including Japan's leading expert on throwing up, a sleep
specialist on how nightcaps can cause depression and a professor on how
drinking too much beer can prevent the secretion of testosterone.
Universally relevant information about the effects of wines, beers and
spirits on the human body is delivered with clarity and precision,
backed up by plentiful footnotes citing the latest academic research.
The unfailingly amusing Haishi has plainly suffered through many a
compulsory works outing and has particularly empathetic advice for
women, including the merits of saké as a miracle skin-care product. The
book explores all sorts of issues, such as:
- Bitter Medicine -- how beer can help to prevent dementia.
- Shakes on a Plane - is in-flight drinking dangerous?
- Mellow Yellow - checking the colour of your pee.
- Snack Attacks - secrets for avoiding weight gain.
- And that perennial mystery . . . how do the French get away
with it?
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