Yet another non-book is the virtually-blank journal. I have two for  
food and three for wine. One food journal is RECIPE FILE (Ryland, 
Peters  & Small, 2008, 144 pages with 8 card pockets, $19.95 spiral 
binding).  You can keep all your loose recipes in one place (unless you 
have hundreds  of them). There are many lined pages for making notes or 
indexing recipes  from books. Space is also available for shopping 
lists, website directory,  and a journal. And there are metric 
conversion charts for the 52 recipes.  There is a quality elastic 
closure band. Another food book is RECIPE  SCRAPBOOK (Duncan Baird, 
2008, 75 colour pages, $24.95) somewhat pricier,  but featuring lots of 
room with 16 pockets and printed recipes in a  scrapbook format. It also 
has 80 recipes, good for all courses and  beverages. It too comes with a 
quality elastic closure band for keeping it  all together.
  
 For an almost blank wine book, try WINE JOURNAL (Ryland, Peters &  
Small, 2008, 144 pages, $19.95), a reissue of the 2002 book. It has  
details on planning a cellar, grapes and styles, storing and serving,  
and room for tasting notes and cellar notes. Advice comes from UK wine  
writers. There is plenty of space to add your own comments, and pocket  
dividers are here to add your own notes. This is a spiral binding, with  
an elastic closure. The similarly named WINE JOURNAL; a companion for  
wine lovers (Chronicle Books, 2008, 192 page, $30 US paper covers) is 
by  Brian St. Pierre, the author of numerous books on wine. It is a  
leather-bound guide to the usual primer information about wine, with  
ample room for jotting down your own notes on all aspects (colour,  
aroma, flavour, etc.), food and wine pairings and visits to wineries.  
There is also a bound-in pocket for keeping labels. There is also 
POCKET  PADS FOR WINE LOVERS (Clarkson Potter, 2008, $9.95 for 4 books) 
a set of  four tasting journals, about 3 by 5 inches, stitched. These 
are portable, to  take to the vineyard or to restaurants, to slip into 
your purse or pocket.  The really are good for jotting tasting notes. 
There are ruled lines for  names, vintages, vineyard or restaurant, and 
notes.
  
 
There is a category of foodbooks called "little cookbooks"; these are  
usually placed at POS (point-of-sales) spots. I've located a very good  
collection of quick and easy, from Ryland Peters and Small, all  
published in 2008. They are 96 pages each, and sell for $15.95 US, but  
they are also hard covers, so they look a bit more posh -- especially  
with the photography and the metric conversion charts. There are about  
50 recipes in each. One is HOLIDAY COOKIES AND OTHER FESTIVE TREATS (45  
recipes) by Linda Collister, with preps such as triple chocolate 
cookies  and lacy brandy snaps (didn't I go to school with Lacy 
Brandy?). Iced star  cookies are always a treat. PARTY BITES (50 
recipes) by Lydia France, has  lots of small food. There are preps for 
dips, finger foods, tartlets,  toasts, skewered food, biscuits, breads 
and some sweet treats. France also  throws in some party planning menus 
and shortcuts. CURRY (51 recipes) by  Sunil Vijayakar covers Indian, 
Thai and Vietnamese versions, from madras to  masala and side dishes. 
Chicken is the most popular, followed by fish. There  are also preps for 
rice, breads, chutneys, kacumber and raita. COOKING WITH  PUMPKINS AND 
SQUASH (50 recipes) is also timely since these are still  locally 
available through the winter. Brian Glover is the author; he covers  all 
courses and desserts. Try zucchini and ricotta fritters, roasted squash  
with leek and barley pilaf, chicken and butternut squash tagine, and  
spiced pumpkin and apple pie.
  
 
There's another collection from BBC Books, all on the theme of 101  
recipes from British magazines. They are 216 pages each, and retail for  
$12.95 Canadian. And a very convenient 5 inch by 6 inch size. Each  
recipe has a pix of the finished plate, and the style is quick and 
easy.  By Janine Ratcliff there is OLIVE 101 GLOBAL DISHES, from Olive 
Magazine in  the UK, "classic dishes from around the world". She also 
wrote OLIVE 101  QUICK-FIX DISHES, about no-fuss 30 minutes or less 
food. OLIVE 101 SMART  SUPPERS and OLIVE 101 SEASONAL TREATS are 
authored by Lulu Grimes. The smart  suppers have slick ideas for week 
nights, while the seasons revolve about  locally available food. From 
Angela Nilsen, there is GOOD FOOD 101  MEDITERRANEAN DISHES, from the 
BBC's Good Food magazine. Standard classics  from both ends of the Sea, 
emphasizing midweek suppers. All courses are  here. Jeni Wright's GOOD 
FOOD 101 BEST EVER CHICKEN RECIPES pushes chicken  as a perfect 
convenience food (it cooks quickly): kebabs, risotto, curry,  and the 
like.
  
  
  
 Annuals -- 
  
 There is a sub-category of stocking stuffers that is really appreciated  
by wine and food lovers: the ANNUAL
Most of these books are pocket  
guides, at least the wine ones are. The food books are regular-sized.  
But you can wedge them into a stocking -- somehow. 
  
 
BEST OF THE BEST, v11; the best recipes from the 25 best cookbooks of  
the year [i.e. 2007] (American Express, 2008, 288 pages, $32.95) has  
more than 100 recipes, about four from each book, all re-tested.  
Cookbooks include "Cooking with Jamie" (Jamie Oliver), "Bobby Flay's  
Mesa Grill Cookbook", "The Art of Simple Food" (Alice Waters), and "The  
Deen Bros. Cookbook". The books are pretty well divided between  
Mediterranean, Asian, US South and Southwest, and baking. Twenty brand  
new "exclusive" recipes have been contributed by these cookbook 
authors.  In addition, there are interviews, quotes, extra reading, and 
ingredient and  technique advice. Websites are listed for even more 
recipes. This is a great  formula annual, with all of the recipes being 
regularized for format and  re-tested. 
  
 
FOOD & WINE ANNUAL COOKBOOK 2008 (American Express, 2008, 408  pages, 
$29.95) delivers good value in its more than 600 recipes: and then  why 
bother to subscribe to the magazine? There are no adverts here in this  
book. There are accompanying wine recommendations for just about every  
prep. The major arrangement is by season.  Some categories have been  
rearranged to allow for a section on fast foods, healthy foods, comfort  
foods, and "chef recipes for home use". There is a plethora of advice  
(50 new ones this year, plus a glossary of accessible wines).  
Unfortunately, the year covered is 2007, so the book will always be a  
year behind.
  
 
On to the wine annuals. The two leaders are HUGH JOHNSON'S POCKET WINE  
BOOK 2009 (Sterling, 2008, 320 pages, $15.95 hard bound) and OZ 
CLARKE'S  POCKET WINE GUIDE 2009 (Harcourt Books, 2008, 344 pages, $15 
hardbound).  Both are guides to wines from all around the world, not 
just to the "best"  wines. Similarities: Johnson claims more than 6000 
wines are listed, while  Clarke says more than 7000, but then recommends 
4000 producers. News,  vintage charts and data, glossaries, best value 
wines, and what to drink now  are in both books. The major differences: 
Johnson has been at it longer   this is his 32rd edition -- and has 
more respect from erudite readers for  his exactitude and scholarliness. 
His book is arranged by region; Clarke's  book is in dictionary, A  Z 
form (about 1600 main entries). It is really  six of one, or half a 
dozen of another which one to use. Johnson's entry for  Canada is 1.2 
pages (big deal). Oz has only one paragraph apiece on  Inniskillin, 
Okanagan (recommending just red wines), and Niagara  (recommending just 
icewines). Both books have notes on the 2007 vintage,  along with a 
closer look at the 2006. It is fun to look at both books and  find out 
where they diverge. As a sidelight, Johnson and Oz are now moving  into 
food: there is a 16 page section on food and wine matching in the  
former, while Oz has 6 pages. Both books could profit from online  
accessibility or a CD-ROM production.
  
 Other wine annuals  mostly paperbacks -- deal with "recommended"  
wines, not all of the wines in the world. Thus, they can afford the  
space for more in-depth tasting notes (TNs) of what they actually do  
cover (usually just wines available in their local marketplace). FOOD &  
WINE's WINE GUIDE 2009 (American Express Publishing, 2008, 320 pages,  
$12.95 paper covers) offers notes on 1000 wines from all over the 
globe;  there are plenty of European wines here. Sections cover the 
elements of  tasting, a Bargain Wine Finder (a listing of 50 rated wines 
that offer the  best value for the price: thankfully, no chardonnays are 
listed). Also here  are food pairing guides, wine country trend reports 
and the year in wine.  Canada is listed along with Mexico and Uruguay. 
Glossaries, guides, tips,  wine and food pairing charts, best of lists  
it goes on and on, and his top  star producers are highlighted. Many of 
the wines can also be found in  Canada.
  
 HAD A GLASS; top 100 wines for 2009 under $20 (Whitecap, 2008,  160
pages, $19.95 Canadian paper covers) is by Kenji Hodgson 
and James  Nevison, the authors of 2003's "Have a Glass; a modern guide 
to wine". They  are the British Columbia 
www.halfaglass.com. Had a Glass 
(now in  its fourth edition) showcases top inexpensive wines available 
primarily in  BC, although those labels with national distribution will 
also be found in  other provinces. They try to pick wines available to 
match any occasion, and  along the way they provide tips on food and 
wine pairing and stemware. The  first forty pages present all the 
basics, including food recipes. I am not  sure why it is here since the 
book is really about the top 100 wines. Most  readers/buyers will head 
straight for the listings which follow, one per  page, for whites, 
roses, reds, aperitifs, dessert wines and sparklers. There  are indexes 
by countries, by wine, and by food. Tasting notes are pretty  bare 
bones, but each wine has a label, a price, and some food matches.
 
 
BILLY'S BEST BOTTLES wines for 2009 (McArthur & Company, 2008, 185  
pages, $21.95 CAD spiral bound) is back for another round (19th ed),  
creating more emphasis on wine and food pairing, party planning, and  
some social manners. There's some info about country trends and  
frequently-asked questions about wine. The whole thing is organized by  
wine colour and style/weight, and the wines are usually those available  
at the LCBO. Most should be available across the country. 
  
 
THE 500 BEST-VALUE WINES IN THE LCBO 2009 (Whitecap, 2009, 256 pages,  
$19.95 CAD paper back) takes a more determined run at the wines at the  
LCBO. This second edition, this time by Rod Phillips, is arranged by  
colour and then by region/country. Each value wine gets a rating (the  
basic is three stars out of five), with an indication of food pairings.  
A good guidebook, but I'm afraid most people will just look through it  
for the 5 star selections and leave it at that. Coverage is limited to  
General Purchase wines and Vintages Essentials only. 
  
 
FOOD & WINE COCKTAILS 2008 (American Express Publishing, 2008, 232  
pages, $18.95 paper covers) is a spirits companion to the wine guide. 
It  keeps tabs on the trendiest nightlife and drinks. These are the top 
150  drinks that bartenders get asked for again and again. The 
arrangement is by  type of spirit, and there are plenty of anecdotes. 
KEVIN ZRALY'S AMERICAN  WINE GUIDE 2009 (Sterling, 2008, 246 pages, 
$16.95 paper covers) tries to  cover all 50 United States. It is by the 
author of the best selling "Windows  on the World Complete Wine Course". 
Not all wines in his book are derived  from grapes; some come from other 
fruit such as pineapple, rhubarb, pears,  apples, and the like. He has 
maps for each state, with grape-growing areas  clearly presented as well 
as illustrations of noble labels. The accompanying  fact box highlights 
state wine production, the number of wineries producing  what types of 
wines, and the key varietals. There are also wine trails and  guides, 
vineyard tours too. Zraly also has a recap on wine tasting and wine  
history in the US. Most of the detail is on big state producers, which  
are (in order of volume) California, Washington, New York, and Oregon.  
Websites of well-known wineries are also listed. The back of the book  
has lists of his hot picks and best values under $50. 
  
 
More next time...