Stocking stuffers are at the top of everybody's Holiday gift list:  something 
affordable (under $10, up to $20) that can also double as a host  gift, 
something small and lightweight. Most of the books here are  paperbacks. 
And of course they can stuff an adult stocking. Typical for food  are:
  
 FIELD GUIDE TO CANDY; how to identify and make virtually every candy  
imaginable (Quirk Books, 2009, 318 pages, $19.95 CAD paper covers) is 
by  Anita Chu, and it must be at the top of everybody's gift list. It's 
in a  handbook format, and is one of a series of others devoted to 
cookies,  cocktails, herbs and spices. The book is arranged by type, so 
all of the  largely chocolate, nuts and fruits are together. Here are 
100 recipes and  variations (international in scope) covering caramel 
apples, lollipops,  Turkish delight, French pralines, and more. Each 
product gets a general  description, a history, and storage dos and 
don'ts. 
  
 
CHOP, SIZZLE & STIR (Ryland Peters & Small, 2009, 64 pages,  $17.95 
hardcover) is Nadia Arumugam, who had trained with the legendary  
Mosimann. She serves up 35 fresh and fast stir-fries, plus variations.  
All meats and vegetables are included, and of course, a wok is  
preferred.
  
 
PESTOS, TAPENADES AND SPREADS (Chronicle Books, 2009, 96 pages, $16.95  
USD soft covers) is by Stacey Printz. She has 12 different pestos and 
14  tapenades, plus some spreads. The idea is to increase flavour by 
adding just  one teaspoon or so of pesto, etc. to almost any dish. I'm 
all for that,  although it would add to the salt component. Some recipes 
here are nut-free  and gluten-free. Try some edamame hummus, or some 
balsamic fig with  caramelized onion and dried cherry.
  
 
CAFFE ITALIA (Ryland Peters & Small, 2009, 64 pages, $17.95  hardcover) 
is by Liz Franklin, a one time finalist in the BBC Masterchef  
competition. Here she presents over 30 (plus variations) preps for  
cookies, cakes, savoury panini, and the like  to accompany the Italian  
coffee culture. There's some quick info on how to brew coffee, but  
otherwise this is a fine short collection of food to go with coffee.
  
 
GUIDE TO HEALTHY FAST FOOD EATING, 2nd ed (McGraw Hill Canada, 2009,  294 
pages, $12.95 paper covers) is by Hope Warshaw, a medical expert who  
has written several books for the American Diabetes Association. Here  
she gives nutrition info for 13 of the most popular US fast food  
franchises, and most are in Canada, such as Baskin Robbins, Subway,  
Pizza Hut, Burger King, McDonald, and Wendy. A great way to control 
your  weight when you eat in those joints: she gives healthy and light 
choices,  and suggests skills and strategies to create healthy meals at 
these places.  It's a jungle out there; you'll need all the help you can 
get.
  
 
I'M DREAMING OF A GREEN CHRISTMAS (Chronicle Books, 2009, 180 pages,  
$24.95 US soft covers) is above my price range, but it is the only book  
I've seen this year to promote gifts, decorations, and recipes that 
"use  less" and "mean more". It has been endorsed by a few environmental  
activists, and printed on 100% post-consumer waste recycled paper. It's  
been written by activist Anna Getty. She carefully explains how to  
reduce your carbon footprint, minimize waste, and creatively reuse.  
There are tips on nesting at home, entertaining, trimming the tree,  
giving donations. 
  
 
100 SOUPS FOR $5 OR LESS (Gibbs Smith, 2009, $12.99 US paper covers) is  
by Gayle Pierce. It is an open and shut book with easy recipes (one per  
page plus variations). She emphasizes new things to do with veggies.  
Each prep has lists of calories and fats per serving, and comes with  
shopping tips, planning advice, and cooking tips. The arrangement is by  
theme: light soups, bean soups, cream soups, fruit soups,  meat-poultry-
seafood soups. 
  
 
100 DESSERTS FOR $5 OR LESS (Gibbs Smith, 2009, 144 pages, $12.95 US  
paper covers) is by Angel Shannon. It is set up the same way as the 
Soup  book above: easy recipes, one prep per page plus variations, and 
covers  cakes, candy, cookies, frozen deserts, pies, tarts, sauces and  
frostings.
  
 
Other little books, for beverages, include:
  
 
PARKER'S WINE BARGAINS; the world's best wine values under $25 (Simon  & 
Schuster, 2009, 498 pages, $24 CAD soft cover) is by Robert Parker,  
Jr., the world's most recognizable wine writer. This has been an 
eagerly  awaited book, since it would be a first for Parker. Previously, 
he had  issued from time to time a listing of his best bargains as he 
wrote them in  his "The Wine Advocate". But this is the first full-blown 
attempt to list  bargains. And, of course, it exceeds my $20 retail 
limit on gift book  purchases. But you can get it for $17.52 through 
Amazon. It is organized by  country, with 1500 producers and over 3000 
wines. He uses his contributor  team of Jay Miller, Antonio Galloni, 
Mark Squires and others for notes, but  he made the ultimate selection 
of labels. The downside is that no vintage  years are given. Now, while 
the hallmark of a bargain wine is its  consistency year in and year out, 
a $25 US wine will show flavour variation  from year to year, and some 
vintages are better than others are. And the  lack of dating keeps the 
book fresher on the shelf. Parker has a food and  wine pairing guide, a 
vintage chart, and numerous top twenty lists. There  are generic 
regional tasting notes and American details about importers and  stores. 
Since we have the LCBO, this shouldn't concern us. A terrific book  for 
the Christmas season, and watch for more of these imports listed here  
to show up at the LCBO.
  
 
SPICE & ICE (Chronicle Books, 2009, 160 pages, $16.95 US soft  covers) 
is by Kara Newman, who writes the "High Spirits" column for Chile  
Pepper magazine. Here are 60 tongue-tingling cocktails, made with some  
component of fresh chile peppers, or ginger or horseradish. There are  
both fruity and savoury here, including the likes of "Wasabi-tinis" and  
"Jumpin' Juleps". Excellent photos, and as the man says, "put a little  
spice into your life". 
  
 
CHEERS! An intemperate history of Beer in Canada (Collins, 2009, 321  
pages, $19.99 CAD soft covers) is by the irrepressible Nicholas 
Pashley,  the celebrated writer of "Notes on a Beermat". He's written 
scads of humour  material in columns, for Dave Broadfoot, and three 
governors general. Here  he takes a light look at Canadian beer history. 
It's a wide-ranging book,  but it is a history written with a deft hand. 
It even has an annotated  bibliography and an index! I love the double-
blurring of the Mountie on the  front cover and a double-blurred Pashley 
himself (complete with red eye) on  the back  beer doppelgangers all.
  
 
HOT DRINKS; indulgent hot chocolates, great coffees, soothing teas,  
spiced punches, and other warming treats for cold days (Ryland, Peters  
& Small, 2009 reissue, 96 pages, $16.95 US hard covers) is by Louise  
Pickford, an experienced cookbook writer from the UK now living in  
Australia. We'll need these hot drinks in the coming cold months of  
2010. 75 recipes include Swedish glogg, hot rum and cider punch, and a  
variety of milk drinks.
  
 
TEA WISDOM; inspirational quotes and quips about the world's most  
celebrated beverage (Tuttle Publishing, 2009, 240 pages, $18.95 CAD  
paper covers) has been collated by Aaron Fisher, who has written  
extensively about tea ("The Art of Tea" magazine). This is a rock solid  
collection of quotes and glosses from different time periods and  
different regions of the world. I think the idea is to savour a cuppa  
while reading parts of this book everyday. It should calm your nerves  
over this rushed and argumentative season.
  
 
Still other smallish books include:
  
 THE LOCAVORE WAY (Storey Publishing, 2009; distr. T. Allen, 247 pages,  
$12.95 US soft covers) is a carry-along guide to shopping locally,  
authored by Amy Cotler, founding director of Berkshire Grown, a 
regional  food initiative. She's also a cookbook author and a major 
contributor to the  revised "Joy of Cooking". In broad outlines, the 
book tells us how to buy,  to cook, and to eat close to home. She has 
hints, lists, tips, tricks, and  strategies for doing all this. Luckily, 
there are not too many US  references, just some specifics to expand on 
the general. Check out 
www.amycotler.com.
 
 
I LOVE MACARONS (Chronicle Books, 2009, 80 pages, $14.95 US soft  
covers) is by Hisako Ogita, and it was originally published in Japanese  
in 2006. This is its first release in English. Macarons are almond 
paste  and sugar, baked into a cookie that is crisp and a little chewy, 
and then  sandwiched with (usually) cream fillings. There are full 
instructions on how  to make petit macaron pastries, plus combining 
various puffs and creams (and  decorating them). There is a whole 
section on making the batter, another  section on making the creams, and 
a third section on putting them all  together. Oh yes, there is also a 
fourth section on using up the surplus egg  yolks (that's not a problem, 
with crème caramel, Bavarian creams, ice cream,  and more). There are 
several hundred pix here in this very entertaining  book. 
  
 
A non-book entry is the party kit. I have three  there's the CHEESE  
TASTING PARTY KIT, subtitled "everything you need to host your own  
cheese-tasting party" [except the cheese, of course] from Chronicle  
Books, 2009, $16.95 US. There are 50 cheese profile cards for common  
cheeses such as Parmigiano Reggiano, Tomme, Camembert, Stilton, 
Cheddar,  Manchego, and the like. The cards describe the milk used, some 
background,  and wine matches. There are also 50 ID cards with 
toothpicks. And a fold-out  informational card with a glossary and data 
on buying, storing, and pairing.  Janet Fletcher wrote this part. 
  
 For games at parties, you could do no worse than get WINE WARS; a  
trivia game for wine geeks and wannabes (Chronicle Books, 2009, $19.95  
US). It promises to be challenging to all and entertaining. Although it  
is American based (e.g. "which country leads in wine exports to US?"),  
it does cover common ground such as growing grapes, making wine, world  
production, selecting and storing wine, and wine tasting. There are 
also  food matches to identify. 150 cards, 750 questions, 6 game boards, 
1 die,  and regional maps of the wine world. Watch out for the 
comparable FOODIE  FIGHT; a trivia game for serious food lovers 
(Chronicle Books, 2009, $19.95  US). It's similarly setup with Q & A on 
cards, but it is also more  vicious. 
  
 
Other non-book items include MOLLIE KATZEN'S RECIPES: DESSERTS (Ten  
Speed Press, 2009, 120 pages, $16.95 CAD) in an easel edition. This is 
a  spiral version of a cook book, and it is a collection of 50 dessert 
recipes.  Preps come from her "Moosewood Cookbook" and "Enchanted 
Broccoli Forest",  but five of them are new. Another easel book (which 
are great, by the way,  since they open up rather well on your kitchen 
counter) is CINDY PAWLYN'S  APPETIZERS (Ten Speed Press, 2009, $17.95 
CAD) which only has 40 recipes.  Thirty of them come from her "Mustards 
Grill Napa Valley Cookbook" and "Big  Small Plates" book, but there are 
10 newer ones. 
  
 
Yet another non-book is the virtually-blank journal. EAT ME; the  
journal (Chronicle Books, 2009, $16.95 US) is meant for the  food-
obsessed. It is a book of pages to record your life in food, such as  
food pleasures and restaurant dining experiences. There are sidebars 
and  lists. Specific blank chapters cover foods from our childhood, our 
current  family foods, top restaurants, top books read on food, dining 
disasters,  kitchen equipment, and wine and cocktails. Useful for 
creating a track  record.
  
 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 2009. They are 64 or 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 COOKING WITH PUMPKINS AND SQUASH 
(50 recipes) which  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. Another of  Glover's books is COOKING WITH 
LEMONS & LIMES (29 recipes) which  contains mostly classical 
Mediterranean dishes (pasta with clams, shrimp and  lemons; grilled 
zucchini and feta salad; roast lemon chicken) plus Key Lime  pie, lemon 
curd, and preserved lemons. COOKING WITH APPLES & PEARS (33  recipes) is 
by Laura Washburn, and includes both sweets and savouries. There  are 
more apple than pear recipes, which reflects popularity levels.  
Surprisingly, there is only one recipe which includes both apples and  
pears: a ginger-apple-pear chutney. But, as in Europe, one can always  
substitute pears for almost every apple dish. LOVE YOUR LEFTOVERS (50  
recipes) is a guide to feeding your friends and family for next to  
nothing. It is quite timely. 18 authors from the Ryland stable  
contributed such preps as cauliflower cheese, fruit crumble, banana  
bread, and a host of meat dishes. ITALIAN BREADS (28 recipes) is by  
Maxine Clark, and includes large loaves, ciabatta rolls, flatbreads,  
focaccia, grissini, pizza dough, and sweet breads.
  
 
There's another collection from BBC Books (2009), all on the theme of  
101 recipes from British magazines. They are 216 pages each, and retail  
for $12.95 CAD at 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 BRILLIANT BAKING IDEAS, from Olive  
Magazine in the UK, "classic dishes from around the world". OLIVE: 101  
STYLISH SUPPERS is hyped as a stay-in supper book for foodies in the  
credit crunch. Jane Hornby wrote 101 MORE ONE-POT DISHES from Good Food  
Magazine in the UK, as well as 101 SPEEDY SUPPERS. Sarah Cook did 101  
CURRIES for the same Good Food Magazine. A good bargain series.
  
 Annual calendars are always monster hits and are often appreciated,  
both the wall and the desk type. The best of the desk are the three  
"page-a-day" (PAD) calendars from Workman. THE WINE LOVER'S CALENDAR  
2010 (Workman, 2009, $16.99 CAD) has been put together by Karen 
MacNeil,  author of "The Wine Bible", with Brooke Cheshier. Saturday and 
Sunday have  been combined on one page. There is a new varietal 
highlighted each month,  tips galore for pouring and tasting, food and 
wine matching, bargains, pop  quizzes, etc. etc. And 100 "must try" 
wines are highlighted (many can be  found in Canada). 365 BOTTLES OF 
BEER FOR THE YEAR 2010 (Workman, 2009,  $16.99 CAD) is by Bob Klein, 
author of "The Beer Lover's Rating Guide". It  too has a combined 
Saturday and Sunday page. Most of the beers appear as  imports in 
Canada, but otherwise there are few Canadian brews included.  Lights, 
lagers, ales, porters, stouts, and lambrics  they're all here.  Other 
material in the PAD includes beer festivals, beer facts, label lore  and 
vocabulary. If you buy any of the PAD calendars, then you can go online  
to the website and pick up other stuff, usually free at 
www.pageaday.com. For wall calendars, there  is GO VEGAN! 2010 Calendar 
(Arsenal Pulp Press, 2009, $14.95 CAD) which has  full-colours 
throughout and is the same size as an LP (remember those?).  Susan 
Kramer has authored many vegan books for this publisher. She appears  
here in many re-creations of advertisements and movie posters, as an  
iconic image of the 1940s and 1950s, reworked for modern vegan  
audiences. There are facts, dates and trivia here. For example, you can  
celebrate World Vegan Day on November 1. The Vegan Society was started  
in Great Britain in 1944 (that's the year they ran out of every food  
possible).
 
 
On to the wine annuals. The two leaders are HUGH JOHNSON'S POCKET WINE  
BOOK 2010 (Mitchell Beazley, 2009, 320 pages, $19.99 CAD hard bound) 
and  OZ CLARKE'S POCKET WINE GUIDE 2010 (Sterling Books, 2009, 352 
pages, $19.50  CAD 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 33rd 
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 2008  
vintage, along with a closer look at the 2007. It is fun to look at 
both  books and find out where they diverge. As a sidelight, Johnson and 
Oz are  moving into food: there is a 16 page section on food and wine 
matching in  the former, while Oz has 6 pages. Johnson also has a 
listing of his personal  200 fave wines. 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. 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). 
  
 Thus, HAD A GLASS; top 100 wines for 2010 under $20, $25, and $30  
(Whitecap, 2009, 168 pages, $19.95 CAD 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  fifth 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  
fifty 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. This year, in view of rising prices, they have enlarged 
their  scope to cover wines at $25 and $30. Unfortunately, for Ontario, 
this is  just at the very time that the LCBO is concentrating on the $15 
to $19.95  spread, with few wines above $20. There are indexes by 
countries, by wine,  and by food. Tasting notes are pretty bare bones, 
but each wine does have a  label, a price, and some food matches.
 
 
THE WINE TRIALS 2010 (Fearless Critic, 2009; distr. T.Allen, 225 pages,  
$14.95 US soft covers) is by Robin Goldstein, with 
Alexis  Nerschkowitsch. Both have food and wine credentials, in addition 
to  authoring restaurant review books and travel books. They have been 
assisted  by 13 named contributing writers and 500 named blind tasters. 
The object of  the book is to come up with hidden wine values. The cover 
proclaims  brown-bag blind tastings for wine values under $15. That's 
$15 US, of  course, and does not allow for discounts and sales so 
prevalent in the US  marketplace. For example, top rated Segura Viudas 
Brut Reserva is $8 US  national retail. It can be cheaper. In Ontario, 
it is $14.65, a firm price.  So it is possible that a top rated US wine 
at $20, going on sale for under  $15, could be well over $30 in Ontario. 
Most of the wines sold in Ontario  are under $25  the trick is to find 
the best ones. This book should give  some guidance. They list 150 wines 
under $15 US that outscored $50 to $150  bottles, using hundreds of 
blind tasters who filled in a simple form. The  authors have lots of 
material justifying their choices, and there are  copious notes for each 
of the 150 wines. Only about half the wines are  available in Ontario, 
and many are not value priced because of the exchange  rate, 
the LCBO mark-up policy and lack of sales/discounts.
  
 
THE 500 BEST-VALUE WINES IN THE LCBO 2010 (Whitecap, 2009, 248 pages,  
$19.95 CAD paper back) takes a more determined run at the wines at the  
LCBO. This third edition, by Rod Phillips, has wines arranged by wine  
colour and then by region/country with price and CSPC number. 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.  Turnover in Ontario must be enormous because this update 
claims over 200 new  wines for a book that deals with just 500. Coverage 
is limited to LCBO  General Purchase wines and LCBO Vintages Essentials, 
the wines that are  available (if only by special order) in every LCBO 
store. 
  
 BILLY'S BEST BOTTLES; wines for 2010 (McArthur & Company, 2010, 240  
pages, $19.95 CAD soft covers) by Billy Munnelly is back for another  
round (20th 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. Plus data on Ontario  
winery tours. His whole concept of wine is organized by Mood, with  
sections on wine colour and style/weight, and the wines are usually  
those available at the LCBO. Most should be available across the  
country. He has over 200 best international wine buys, with most under  
$20 and many under $12. And there is a wine index at the back where  
wines are listed by region. Check out 
www.billysbestbottles.com.