1.THE DIRTY GUIDE TO WINE; following flavors from ground to glass (The   Countryman Press, 2017, 256 pages, ISBN 978-1-58157-384-8 $24.95 USD paperbound)   is by Alice Feiring, a major force in the wine writing world with award-winning   articles, books, and a blog (alicefeiring.com, since 2004). She's assisted by   Pascaline Lepeltier Master Sommelier (MS) who strongly believes in terroir. For   years there have been nothing really new in wine books except biographies,   regional analyses, and tasting notes. What keeps it all fresh is that there are   new vintages every six months (above and below the Equator) that require   updating. However, this book is both new and DIFFERENT. It is all about TERRAIN:   the wines discussed here are organized by bedrock, and include vines grown over   igneus bedrock (basalt, granite), sedimentary (limestone, shale, mudstone, clay,   gravel) and metamorphic (slate, schist, gneiss). There are select tasting notes   that illustrate differences, and cheat sheets for the three major forms of   bedrock. Bravo, well done!
  Audience and level of use: jaded wine lovers looking for new snob   points.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Alsace stands alone with a   variety of bedrocks.
  The downside to this book: not all the world is covered, but all of the   largest producing regions are.
  The upside to this book: something unique, although there have been a few   books about "volcanic" wines.
  Quality/Price Rating: 92+.
   
 

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