NATURAL   WINE; in introduction to organic and biodynamic wines made naturally (Cico   Books, 2014; distr. T. Allen, 224 pages, ISBN 978-1-78249-100-2, $24.95 US hard   covers) is by Isabelle Legeron, the first French woman to become a Master of   Wine, She runs the RAW Natural Wine Festival in London, and consults with   restaurants and promotes "natural" wine. She's also got a website   www.thatcrazyfrenchwoman.com, with a TV show on the Travel Channel under that   name. There is a large argument raging in the wine world over what is a natural   wine. Some believe that it should be applied only to organic and biodynamic   farms; others think it should also mean "sustainable" or "green", etc. The key   would simply be to get rid of the word "natural" and just have "organic or   biodynamic" and "sustainable". It is only the organic and biodynamic wines that   are certifiable. There are no controls over the rest of the "natural" wording on   the label. Indeed, some organic wineries just press organic grapes and then use   regular winemaking techniques. They can still call their wines organic. I know   of many farms who use the term "natural" to reflect their organic practices,   because they just do not have the money nor the wait time to apply for   certification. Legeron offers one of the first books meant for the general   reader to cover O & B wines. In general, wine is a process, and it is also   an industry. Wineries try to be consistent from year to year because they have a   product to sell. The weather determines what about of "corrections" the   winemaker needs to take (more acid, earlier/later picking, more sugar, more   irrigation, etc.). A natural O & B winery rolls with the punches and   produces wine "as is". The author takes us through the year and discusses wine   faults, stability, health issues, taste, fermentation, sulphites, and a load of   contentious issues. She's assisted from time to time by other writers such as   Nicolas Joly, Tony Coturri, and 11 others. She gives notes on 140 wines, sorted   by types (bubbly, red, white, rose, sweet). Not surprisingly, France has the   most listings, followed by Italy: these are the two leaders by production.   Canada has one mention (Pearl Morissette in Niagara, a Chardonnay), but none in   the longer list of "other" wineries. Other additional sections cover a glossary,   lists of associations and wine fairs, restaurants and stores for the US and UK,   and a bibliography
  Audience and level of use: the curious reader, wine lovers.
  Some interesting or unusual facts: "soils harbor 80 percent of the world's   biomass. Earthworms alone, for example, amount to about the same weight as all   other animals combined."
  The downside to this book: too many gratuitous photos of just bottles and   the like.
  The upside to this book: a beginning – let's have more.
  Quality/Price Rating: 90.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com   
 
 

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