--THE CANON COCKTAIL BOOK (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016, 338   pages,  $40 CAD hardbound) is by Canadian-born Jamie Boudreau, who opened   the multiple-award-winning Canon in Seattle in 2011 and now has a 100-drink   basic menu, and James O. Fraioli, who is an award-winning (including Beard   Award) cocktail and cookbook author. Indeed, the bar is only 450 square feet,   with seven tables for 32 people – they need the unseen space for bottle storage.   Three menus support the bar: a bi-monthly seasonal menu, a 100 page long   cocktail menu, and a 165 page long spirit menu of 3500 bottles. These are   recipes from the bar. He's got a special section on Canada, honouring the west   coast and even Toronto. These are his takes on the classics and the   contemporaries. Extremely useful and a great souvenir.
  --THIS CALLS FOR A DRINK (Workman, 2016, 264 pages, $22.95 CAD hardbound)   promises to give us "the best wines and beers to pair with every situation", as   described by author Diane McMartin. This is how to drink like an adult, what   wine goes with a one night stand, with a blind date,  if you are newly   single, or binge watching television. She covers work, holidays, music   festivals, weddings, baby showers, and dating. There are some good inspirations   here, a mix of serious and humourous.
  --GRAND BORDEAUX CHATEAUX (Flammarion, 2016, 200 pages, $85 CAD hardbound)   is a joint effort with texts by Philippe Chaix, tasting notes by James Suckling,   and photographs by Guillaume de Laubier. It is a weighty tome coming in at just   under 2 kilos. It's main value is to go inside the great wine estates of   Bordeaux. Here are 12 chateaux with state-of-the-art cellars that were designed   by acclaimed architects. Included are Lafite Rothschild, Margaux, Mouton   Rothschild, Petrus, Cheval Blanc and seven more. No Latour, mostly because it   doesn't have a modern designed wine cellar. La Dominique is here, especially as   it is a UNESCO World Heritage site. A good holiday volume for the wine   collector.
  --FRENCH WINE; a history (University of California Press, 2016, 335 pages,   $50 CAD hardbound) is by Rod Phillips, a history professor at Carleton   University and who is also a wine writer. His work covers 2500 years on a number   of different and evolving levels: vineyard areas, volumes of wine production,   climate changes, new methods of making wine, regulation and fraud, changing   markets, terroir, export trades. Benchmark wines are made in every region:   France is the go-to place for wines in the style of  Bordeaux, Burgundy,   Champagne, Rhone Syrah, Provence Rose, Rhone GSM, and many others. For all of   this in 335 pages (with end notes and index), it is a marvellous overview.   Phillips is also very good at making the  connections through his   synthesis. I think his best chapter deals with phylloxera and renewal   (1870-1914). 
  --ZEN AND TONIC (The Countryman Press, 2016, 240 pages, $32.95 CAD   hardbound) by Jules Aron presents savoury and fresh cocktails for the   enlightened drinker. The preps are for making your own drinks at home, using   organic spirits, fresh produce, herbs and other botanicals, and natural   sweeteners. Covered are drinks that are lush or fruity or fresh or crisp or   sweet or spicy, or some or all of these. What with all the add-ons and   infusions, these are tall drinks, practically meals in themselves. Personally, I   don't think you need organic spirits (they are pricey), but do go the   sustainable route with the other ingredients.
  --APERTIVO (Rizzoli, 2016, 224 pages, $35 CAD hardbound) is by Marisa Huff.   It deals with the cocktail culture of Italy, with recipes for both drinks and   for small dishes to eat with those drinks. All the preps and cocktails come from   the better bars and restaurants of Venice, Milan, Turin, and others: the   expensive, upscale parts of industrial Italy. Of course, it is also a travel   guide to the region. The basic Italian classics are here: the Negroni, the   Bellini, and the Spritz. Vermouth and bitters, coupled with the botanicals of   gins, give you the herbs that are good for you and your digestion. Suggested   foods include carbonara tramezzini and fried sage leaves.
  --CHIANTI CLASSICO (University of California Press, 2016, 339 pages, $55.95   CAD hardbound) is by Bill Nesto MW and Frances Di Savino. It is a comprehensive   search for one of Tuscany's noblest wines. Previously they had authored the   award-winning "The World of Sicilian Wine". It's got the history, the Medicis,   the Florentine state, and then the slow degradation to the simple wine of the   straw fiasco. The geographic and cultural complexity of the region is enhanced   by profiles of modern day wineries. 2016 is the 300th anniversary of the Medici   decree delimiting the region of Chianti. A good solid read. 
  --DRINKS; A USER'S GUIDE (Tarcher Perigee, 2016, 258 pages, $27 CAD   hardbound)  is by Adam McDowell, a Toronto drinks writer with the National   Post. It includes beer, wine and cocktails for everyday and all occasions, with   advice on what wine to order in a restaurant. Other tips include: don't drink   wine at weddings as they are nearly always poor; try cocktails instead. His tome   is basically for beginners, with sections on stocking the home bar, how to make   flawless cocktails, and some sparkling wine alternatives.
  --BUT FIRST, CHAMPAGNE (Skyhorse Publishing, 2016, 288 pages, $46.99 CAD   hardbound) is by David White, a renowned wine writer living in Washington, DC.   It's a modern guide to the world's fave wine, complete with a history of the   region and of its wines, a glossary, a bibliography, material on how to purchase   and taste Champagne, sabrage, and organic/biodynamic viticulture. He's got   profiles of 80 of the leading producers (they sell millions of bottles each   year), and some of the best growers (look for R.M on the bottle's label; they   sell only thousands of bottles a year). Each profile has the appropriate deets.   A good heavy tome for the Champagne lover.
  --HOPTOPIA (University of California Press, 2016, 306 pages, $41.95 CAD   paperbound) is by Peter A. Kopp, a history prof at New Mexico State University.   It's a history of hops, an entry in the California Studies in Food and Culture   publication program at UC. Basically, the American craft beer revolution of the   late 20th century came about through earlier global events that merged in the   Willamette Valley of Oregon. Travelling from Eurasia, hops arrived in the   Pacific Northwest in the 19th century, and ultimately Oregon was pronounced the   "Hop Center of the World". Kopp 's academic work tells the story through the   environment, the culture, the economy, the labour and the science of the region.   "Cascade" hops comes to mind easily from this region, as does "Nugget" and   "Willamette". An engaging tome, with many endnotes, bibliography, and   comprehensive index, but very readable.
  --AMERICAN RHONE (University of California Press, 2016, 311 pages, $50 CAD   hardbound) is by Patrick Comiskey, a major contributor to Wine & Spirits   Magazine and other publications. It is the story of a movement by some   California winemakers to replicate the wines of Southern Rhone in France by   putting their own stamp on them. They are loosely called the "Rhone Rangers",   and have their own festivals and wine competitions.  The subtitle here is   "how maverick winemakers changed the way Americans drink". Grapes from the   Southern Rhone include the reds  Grenache, Syrah, and Mourvedre (Mataro) ,   and the whites Viognier (think Condrieu), Roussanne, and Marsanne. The   overheated Rhone Valley nicely transfers to Central California and to Australia.   Here Comiskey explains why this wine category is expanding with more production   from more acreage and energy. It is, after all, the American frontier   experience. One of its leaders has been the eclectic Randall Grahm (Bonny Doon   Winery).
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com   
 
 

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