By Dean Tudor, Ryerson Journalism Professor Emeritus and Gothic 
  Epicures Writing, www.deantudor.com (World Wine Watch Newsletter).
                Twitter:   @gothicepicures
  ------
  There are always many new food and wine books out there for people who   
  have picky tastes!! What to choose? I have cast about for material and have   
  come up with a decent selection of materials published in 2017 to satisfy   
  any pocketbook, any host, and any friend or relative. All books and   book-like 
  materials that are listed here are RECOMMENDED for gifting, and can be   
  purchased at a discount via Amazon.Ca, Chapters.Indigo.Ca (with free 
  delivery on a total purchase of over $25 or so), or even The Book 
  Depository in Guernsey (free delivery and no GST from the UK).
  Price Alert: because of US dollar fluctuations with Canada, all prices will   vary. 
  Part One: TOP GIFT IDEAS
  ========================
  A. Art/travel/restaurant cookbooks might be some of the best books to give   
  a loved one (or to yourself, since you are your own best loved one). Most   
  may cost you an arm and a leg. Books for the coffee table have their place   
  in the gift scheme: just about every such book is only bought as a gift!   And 
  are often perused first by the donor (you). Don't let the prices daunt you.   
  Such books are available at a discount from online vendors. Because of the   
  "economy", not too many pricey food and wine books were released this   
  year. Herewith, and in random order: 
  --DAVID TANIS MARKET COOKING (Artisan , 2017, 480 pages, $58 CAD 
  hardbound) is by, well, Chef David Tanis. You know the chef has arrived   
  when the publisher puts the name as part of the actual title. He's worked   as 
  a chef for three decades, notably at Chez Panisse and Cafe Escalera. He's   
  also the author of several cookbooks, and is currently writing a weekly   food 
  column for the New York Times. Here is a collection of 200 recipes and   
  thoughts, ingredient by ingredient, on food likely to be found at farmers'   
  markets, or, as the French say "la cuisine du marche". As he says, it   means: 
  I go to the market, see what looks best, and then decide what will go in   the 
  meal. Fresh ingredients provide the inspiration, and the majority of the   
  preps are veggie-based and global in scope. Indeed, the arrangement is by   
  vegetable, with alliums (garlic, onions, leeks, shallot, scallions) having   a 
  chapter all to themselves. There is also material on seasoning and kitchen   
  essentials (eggs, dairy, rice, pasta, noodles, et al).
  --THE LAMBSHANK REDEMPTION COOKBOOK (Dog 'n' Bone, 2017, 
  144 pages, $29.95 hardbound) is by Lachlan Hayman, who also wrote 
  Killing Me Souffle (a collection of music-based recipes). Here he has   
  collated 50 movie-inspired recipes. Although Silence of the Lambs is here   
  renamed Silence of the Clams (and comes in as a bacon and clam 
  chowder), I think the original fava beans and liver with Chianti would have   
  been  more appropriate. But chacun a son gout. Most of the dishes   relate to 
  a re-titling of the films, such as Bratwurst at Tiffany's, The Hummus Crown   
  Affair, The King's Peach, or My Big Fat Greek Salad. Jurassic Pork also   
  works for me.  Good idea for the movie mavens.
  --ISTANBUL & BEYOND (Rux Martin/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2017, 352   
  pages, $50 CAD hardbound) is by food writer Robyn Eckhardt. It's an 
  exploration of the diverse cuisines of Turkey, with excellent travel and   food 
  photography by David Hagerman. There is also material on stocking the   
  Turkish pantry for the serious cook, and a glossary. This is the   cross-roads 
  country between Europe and Asia, and shows heavy influences from the 
  surrounding countries such as Syria, Iraq, Iran, Armenia, Georgia, Bulgaria   
  and Greece. All courses are covered, and there is a separate index to   
  recipes by category. For example, breads include borek, tahini buns, pan   
  bread, kete, corn breads, flatbreads, hand-pies, and bread rings. Plenty of   
  meat, but no pork. Historical cultural and travel notes accompany just   about 
  every recipe.
  --VENETO: recipes from an Italian country kitchen (Guardian Books/Faber   
  and Faber, 2017, 288 pages, $42.95 CAD hardbound) is by Valeria 
  Necchio, who grew up in the countryside of inland Veneto (not Venice   itself). 
  Here she tells stories of food, people and places, sharing recipes with   
  credit. This is, as Alice Waters endorsed, regional home cooking at its   best. 
  The first part explores "then", the second part does "now" (both 125 pages   
  each) while the third part is the Venetian seasonal pantry.  There's   baccala 
  mantecato, schie frite, sarde in saor, ovi e sparsi, maroni rosti, fritaja   de 
  erbe – and scores more. Good company for Brunetti when he travels   inland.
  --LISBON (Hardie Grant Books, 2017, 256 pages, $50 CAD hardbound) is 
  by UK freelance food writer and TV presenter Rebecca Seal who has 
  written other food travel books (Istanbul, The Islands of Greece). She's   got 
  some culinary links to former Portuguese colonies such as Goa,Brazil and   
  Mozambique, which have added to the local Lisbon food scene  Each   
  recipe has a story. The classics are here: salt cod and chickpea seals,   piri 
  piri chicken, Goan fish curry, and, of course, clams with pork (or is it   pork 
  with clams?). Preps are titled in both Portuguese and English, and the   index 
  provided a comprehensive analysis. Travel and plated photos  are by   her 
  husband food and drink photographer Steven Joyce. A very worthwhile gift   
  for people who have already been there and want to refresh their memories.   
  --RIVER COTTAGE A TO Z: our favourite ingredients and  how to cook   them 
  (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2017, 708 pages, $86 CAD hardcovers) is by 
  Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall plus contributions from eight others on the   River 
  Cottage team. They go to work with short notes and cross-referenced 
  recipes for each ingredient (with writer attribution). It is this year's   monster 
  gift at this price and weight of just under six pounds (2.6 kilos). Not for   the 
  slight. It is a fine reference tool as well since there is a lot here that   you may 
  never see or use, such as puffballs, woodcock, winkles, purslane, or snipe.   
  But the common are also covered, such as eggs, bacon, cheese, salt, and   
  allspice.  Each mini-essay details  the origins, propagation, and   culinary 
  uses of vegetables, herbs, seafood, and meats. Beware, though, of the   
  distinct British orientation (eg, aubergines). 
  --BANGKOK (Ten Speed Press, 2017, 360 pages, $47 CAD hardbound) is 
  by Leela Punyaratabandhu, who writes about Thai food (she had previously   
  authored Simple Thai Food). This one covers the food of Bangkok, her 
  hometown. It's loaded with street food which, of course, needs a strong   
  urban/tourist environment. In addition to the photos of plated recipes,   there 
  are many stories of Bangkok with photos of the landscape. Here are 120   
  preps ranging from curried chicken puffs, omelette rolls with crabmeat and   
  shrimp paste relish, chicken matasman curry, noodles and desserts. She's   
  got strong notes on pantries and rice, as well as the engaging stories of   
  Bangkok foods.
  --DALMATIA (Hardie Grant Books, 2017, 224 pages, $57 CAD hardbound) 
  is by Ino Kuvacic, who owns and chefs at  Dalmatino in Melbourne. It's   this 
  year's Croatian cookbook (there is usually one a year). These are preps   
  from Croatia's  Adriatic coast, with four chapters covering veggies,   seafood, 
  meat and sweets. Most of the photos are of the plated foods, but there are   
  some obviously tourist-y ones from along the coast. Try brudet (Dalmatian   
  fish stew), crni rizot (black risotto) and duved (sauteed veggies with   rice). 
  Engaging...
  --LURE (Figure 1, 2017,  240 pages, $38.95 CAD hardbound) is by Ned   
  Bell, once executive chef of Four seasons Hotel Vancouver and other 
  places but now heavily involved with seafood sustainability groups such as   
  "Chefs for Oceans" which he founded in 2014. He's writing with Valerie   
  Howes, food editor of Reader's Digest Canada and currently writing a work   
  on edible landscapes and seascapes of Fogo Island, Newfoundland. These   
  are sustainable seafood recipes from the West Coast of Canada. The 
  recipe section is arranged by type: white fish, fatty fish, shellfish, and   sea 
  greens. It is headed by a recipe list by course, so you can always find a   
  sandwich or soup or app. There is a 50-page chapter on specie profiles, so   
  you can get the lowdown on what to look for when buying and how to prep.   
  There's one dessert here (seaweed brownies), and one drink (seaweed 
  vodka caesar) plus salads, mains, snacks, appetizers, sandwiches, and   
  soups. He's identified all the healthy fish and shellfish species on the   West 
  coast, so it is a useful tome to assuage any feelings of irresponsibility.   
  --THE CHILTERN FIREHOUSE: THE COOKBOOK (Ten Speed Press, 
  2017, 320 pages, $66 CAD hardbound) is from a London restaurant in a 
  Victorian building which also houses a 26-suite hotel. The building, in   
  Marylebone, was once the Manchester Square Fire Station, but was 
  renovated by Andre Balazs (who also owns hotels in New York and 
  Hollywood). He's on the title page, as is Nuno Mendes the chef. The 
  Firehouse is strong on cocktails and snacks. Stephen Fry's faves are the   
  Firehouse Sazerac, bacon cornbread fingers with chipotle maple butter and   
  fried chicken with smoky bacon ranch dip. Among the mains you will find   
  the red mullet with endive hearts, mussels and marcona almonds. To 
  conclude, Fry wants to die with the frozen apple panna cotta on his lips. A   
  third of the (oversized) tome is cocktails and snacks, and if you add   starters 
  (which are actually large snacks or small plates), then you are up to page   
  170  -- more than half the book. Mains and deserts are about 100   pages. 
  Add brunch and a lot of well-sited photos with a history of the   establishment. 
  Recommended strongly as a gift for the millennials.
  --THE DESSERTS OF NEW YORK (Hardie Grant Books, 2017, 242 
  pages, $34.99 CAD softbound)  is by travel cookbook author Yasmin   
  Newman. It is a detailed survey guide to the various places one can find   
  desserts in NYC, with info on places, people and areas. She's got the   
  recipes for the "best" NYC cheesecake, NYC cupcakes, and NYC banana 
  cream mille crepes – among others. For your NYC friends and visitors.   
  --THE GRAND CENTRAL MARKET COOKBOOK (Clarkson Potter, 2017, 
  256 pages, $40 CAD hardbound) is by Adele Yellin (her firm owns and has   
  operate the GCM since 1984) and Kevin West. This is cuisine and   culture  
  from downtown Los Angeles. The GCM has been here since 1917; this is its   
  centennial year. The 34 stalls are a mix of legacy tenants and new vendors   – 
  all culturally diversified with a great ethnic mix of food. There are 85   recipes 
  to make at home, plus pix of the buzz at the market. Narratives include   
  behind-the-scenes stories and interviews with popular vendors and longtime   
  shoppers. Preps have been sourced from the stalls and the whole book has   
  been wrapped around excellent photography and illustrations. 
  --IN MY KITCHEN (Ten Speed Press, 2017, 286 pages, $42.50 CAD 
  hardbound) is by the indefatigable Deborah Madison, one of the most 
  important cookbook authors (14) with major awards (Beard, Fisher, IACP)   
  working in the area of vegetarian food. More than 100 recipes here come   
  from her personal selection of what she eats today in New Mexico. It's all   
  organized by major ingredient, and each prep has some vegan and   gluten-
  free variations. Consider the basic tomato and red pepper tart in a yeasted   
  crust, or the Japanese sweet potato soup with ginger and smoked salt.   
  She's got lots of cook notes and tips for the preps, complemented by 
  sterling close-up photography. A great gift idea – in fact, buy two and   keep 
  one for yourself.
  --PROVENCE TO PONDICHERRY (Quadrille, 2017, 288 pages, $50 CAD 
  hardbound) is by Tessa Kiros, with photography by Manos Chatzikonstantis   
  and food styling by Michail Touros. It's about the French threads in food   and 
  travel, and goes through Provence, Guadeloupe, Vietnam, Pondicherry, La   
  Reunion, and Normandy – all within 300 or so pages. Part memoir and part   
  recipes, with lots of photos. There's rougail tomate, coriander chutney,   sticky 
  rice with coconut and ginger, tapenade, fried shallots – and more. A great   
  guide for the traveller.
  --FRANCE: from the source (Lonely Planet Books, 2017, 288 pages, 
  $34.99 CAD hardbound) is by Carolyn Boyd. Each chapter covers  a   
  specific geographical area; there are four of these (northern, central,   
  southeast and southwest France), plus recipe sources. These are the best   
  local dishes from restaurant chefs, such as snails with butter and   parsley  or 
  salade lyonnaise or salade nicoise. And, of course, there are cultural   notes 
  about the dish, the region, and the chef. One of a very impressive series   
  (which already has Japan, Spain, and Mexico).
  --MEXICO: from the source (Lonely Planet Books, 2017, 288 pages, 
  $34.99 CAD hardbound) is by five different authors, each to a region. There   
  are five  geographical regions (Baja California, Yucatan, Oaxaca,   Pacific 
  Coast and Mexico City) plus recipe sources. These are the best local 
  dishes from restaurant chefs, such as habanero salsa, tuna tostados, 
  ceviche, chicken legs with red chile spices, pozole, and turkey soup with   
  meat balls. And, of course, there are cultural notes about the dish, the   
  region, and the chef. One of a series.
  --STREET FOOD ASIA (Hardie Grant Books, 2017, 306 pages, $60 CAD 
  hardbound) is by Luke Nguyen of Saigon who travels through Malaysia, 
  Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia, with photography by Alan Benson. It's an   
  oversized tome concentrating on both the street food (such as duck egg and   
  beef martabak) and the vendors, with cultural stories about the food. It is   all 
  aromatic fragrant food, full of baguettes and banana leaves, pork and rice,   
  tamarind water, tea and tofu. And now you can make the foods at home with   
  the given recipes.
  --DINNER (Clarkson Potter, 2017, 400 pages, $47 CAD hardbound) is by 
  award-winning IACP and Beard author Melissa Clark, staff food writer for   
  the New York Times. She's got 200 recipes that, in her opinion, "change the   
  game". It's arranged by main ingredient: chicken, meat (but including duck   
  and turkey), ground meats, seafood/fish, eggs, pasta, tofu, veggie dinners,   
  rice, pizzas, soups, salads, and add-ons such as dips/spreads/breads. It is   
  an oversized and heavy tome, very impressive as a gift.
  --ACQUACOTTA (Hardie Grant Books, 2017, 272 pages, $50 CAD 
  hardbound) is by Emiko Davies, who has lived in Tuscany for many years.   
  This is the cuisine of Tuscany's Silver Coast by the Tyrrhenian Sea (Monte   
  Argentario, with its Port Ercole where she lived for awhile:  "Cucina   
  Maremmana"). These recipes and stories are dominated by the water and   
  lagoon, although there are preps from the surrounding woods and cultivated   
  farms. The chapter "Dal Mare e Dalla Laguna" seems to have many ancient   
  seafood dishes from the fishing towns. She's even got a bibliography for   
  further reading. Lots of non-food photos and stories also makes this a   travel 
  work.
  --THE COMPLETE ASIAN COOKBOOK (Hardie Grant Books, 2017, 640 
  pages, $75 CAD hardbound) is by Charmaine Solomon. It was first issued   
  in 1976 and extensively revised in 2011; over its life it has sold more   than a 
  million copies. The collection of 800+ recipes from Asiatic countries   (India, 
  China, Japan, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Malaysia, Singapore, Burma,   
  Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Philippines, Korea, and Thailand) has been 
  translated into other European languages. This is its 40th anniversary   
  celebration edition. It's a huge oversized tome but is very comprehensive   
  and well-written – it is sure to please as a terrific gift.
  --MY FRENCH COUNTRY HOME (Gibbs Smith, 2017, 208 pages, $50 
  CAD hardbound) is by Sharon Santoni,  whose blog is the same as the   
  book's title.  It deals with entertaining through the seasons   (beginning with 
  spring), and comes with gorgeous photography by Franck Schmitt. 
  Scattered throughout are easy versions of classic French cuisine, such as   
  cherry clafoutis, quiche Lorraine, fougasse bread, tarte Tatin, and roast   duck 
  – about 15 in all. A  definite coffee table tome; indeed, it IS a   coffee table – 
  just attach legs (available separately). Her topics are universal: daily   life in 
  rural France (here, Normandy) with its ups and downs; French girlfriends;   
  intricacies of village life; and searching for brocante treasure in the   flea 
  markets of Paris and the countryside. Well-worth a look.
  --KING SOLOMON'S TABLE (Knopf, 2017, 386 pages, $47 CAD 
  hardbound) is by Jean Nathan, multiple cookbook award winner (Beard, 
  IACP, Child) and host of PBS cookery shows. For forty years she has 
  specialized in Jewish cooking themes, and here gives us a culinary 
  exploration of Jewish diaspora cooking from around the world. It is an   
  informative guide to the international global scope of Jewish cooking,   
  arranged by course and major ingredient: pantry matters, morning dishes,   
  starters, salads, soups, grains, veggies, fish, poultry, meats and sweets.   
  She's got socca, spanakit (Georgian spinach salad) and keftes garaz 
  (Syrian meatballs). Most of the 170  preps are accompanied by detailed   
  cultural notes and photos. There is also an in-depth bibliography and a   
  thorough index. Well-worth perusing.
  --PORTLAND COOKS (Figure 1 Publishing, 2017, 226 pages, $37.95 
  CAD hardbound) is by local cookbook author and food writer/blogger 
  Danielle Centoni, who also has a Beard Award. It is another in the great   
  series from Figure 1 detailing recipes from a city's best restaurants and   
  bars. Having done the major cities of Canada, the Canadian publishers are   
  expanding to contiguous locations such as Portland (can Seattle be far   
  behind?). The series is fairly straightforward: there is an introduction to   the 
  restaurants and the local food scene, followed by a home version of the   
  restaurant's recipe (usually one or two) and some detail about the 
  establishment with pix. Copyright to the preps is normally held by the   
  restaurant; they are loaded with ideas.   It's a great tome for   any fan or 
  resident of Portland.
  --TORONTO EATS  (Figure 1 Publishing, 2017, 238 pages, $37.95 CAD   
  hardbound) is by Amy Rosen, author of Toronto Cooks (2014) in the Figure   
  1 series. That  work sold pretty well, and as she says "now we're back   for 
  seconds". Here are 100 signature recipes from 50 chefs (some of whom 
  were in the first one). Restaurants here include Boralia, Byblos, Honest   
  Weight, Lena, Nota Bene, Pizzeria Libretto, Zucca Trattoria. There are   
  stories from the restaurants (who hold the copyrights to the recipes)    and 
  photos, plus pix of plated dishes.  A great addition to the Toronto   scene, and 
  a must-read for the Holidays.
  B. And how about gift books for the beverage drinker? Try – 
  =====================================
  --HALLIDAY WINE COMPANION 2018 (Hardie Grant Books, 2017, 776 
  pages, $57 CAD paperbound) by James Halliday, who has been at wine 
  writing for about 47 years. This is the definitive guide to Australian   wines. 
  He gives us data about the wineries and their vineyards, deets on 
  addresses, social media, opening hours, names and other numbers, 
  followed by detailed tasting notes, vintage-specific ratings, advice on   
  optimal drinking period, ABV, and prices. There are supposed to have been   
  some 10,000 wines tasted for this edition, and he has full tasting notes   for 
  3859 (couldn't he push it up to 4K?), ratings and prices for 2979 other   
  wines, 1237 winery profiles (77 are new wineries), "best of" lists and   five-
  star wineries listed. There are vintage charts and maps plus multiple   
  indexes. But I am sure if he got together with his Kiwi counterpart, they   could 
  come up with some antipodean pocket guide at 256 pages to cover both 
  countries and sell it in North America and the UK; it's sure to be a   winner.
  --DR. ADAM ELMEGIRAB'S BOOK OF BITTERS (Dog 'n' Bone, 2017, 160 
  pages, $30 CAD hardbound) is "the bitter and twisted history" of one of the   
  cocktail bar's most fascinating ingredient. There is a brief history,   followed 
  by the "myth of Angostura". Fascinating indeed is the manufacturing 
  process. Tastewise, a light use of bitters picks up flavours in the   cocktail 
  and emphasizes them with a slight tang. Elmegirab, a bar writer and 
  educator who also owns a bitters company, provides us with 50 cocktail   
  recipes created by bartenders (including himself) from around the world.   
  They showcase the different intents of bitters: acidity on the palate,   saltiness 
  enhancement, savoury umami, and the like.  A good book to have.
  --THE CURIOUS BARTENDER'S RUM REVOLUTION (Ryland Peters & 
  Small, 2017, 256 pages, $37.50 CAD hardbound) is by Tristan 
  Stephenson, who has authored four other Curious Bartender books 
  (Whiskies, Cocktails, Gin, plus one on Coffee) over the years. This is a   
  guidebook to the rum revival, with cultural and historical notes and   photos. 
  Yesterday's grog has become a range, from white rum through aged and 
  spiced varieties – just about all of it premium spirits. Sugarcane and   
  molasses never had it so good! He's got notes on 50 or so rum distilleries   
  throughout the world, 250 tasting notes, plus the stories behind the iconic   
  drinks of Mai Tai, Mojito, Pina Colada, and Planter's Punch.
  --THE CHAMPAGNE GUIDE 2018-2019 5th edition (Hardie Grant Books, 
  2017, 368 pages, $50 CAD hardbound) is by Tyson Stelzer who covers 625   
  Champagnes from 113 important producers. It is as up-to-date as it can be,   
  with new chapters on tips for buying Champagne this year, a  chapter   on 
  Champagne and food matching, and updated deets on 95 producers (a few   
  have been dropped but 40 new players have been added). Houses and 
  cuvees that did not make the cut are featured in the index only.  Some   wines 
  are tasted on the Champagne site while others were tasted in Australia (and   
  can be indicative of travel and storage). Grape varieties and percentages   
  are indicated as well as long tasting notes and points out of a hundred.   
  Glossaries are also included. Great guide for travellers too. A posh book   for 
  a posh wine. 
  --ANCIENT BREWS REDISCOVERED AND RE-CREATED (W.W. Norton 
  & Company, 2017, 291 pages, $35.95 CAD hardbound) is by Patrick E.   
  McGovern, an adjunct professor of anthropology  at U Penn who has   written 
  two other "ancient" drink books: "Uncorking the Past" and "Ancient Wine".   
  Here he looks at beer and the early experimentation with high-sugar fruits,   
  honey, roots, cereals, herbs and tree-resins. He combines archaeology with   
  science to cover China, Turkey, Egypt, Italy, Scandinavia, Peru – and more   
  – in their attempts at the perfect brew. Along the way he has the original   
  recipes, the re-created preps (not guaranteed, says the publisher), and   food 
  pairing. Plus archival illustrations and a chapter-by-chapter bibliography.   
  --NEW ZEALAND WINE: the land, the vines, the people (Hardie Grant 
  Books, 2017, 376 pages, $85 CAD hardbound) is by geographer Warren 
  Moran, professor emeritus at the University of Auckland, which originally   
  published this tome late last year. Here is the international edition   published 
  in Australia and now being made available in North America. Moran has   
  extensively covered the rural industries of New Zealand. This is a great   
  introduction to the wines: the terroir, the grape varieties, the families   and 
  personalities, the companies, and the wines themselves. There's a brief   
  history and then a swing through the eight wine regions. All with maps,   
  archival photos, panoramic views, and the rise (and importance of ) 
  sauvignon blanc on the world stage. Pricey, but definitive – and more than   
  just a coffee table addition.
  --NATURAL WINE; in introduction to organic and biodynamic wines made 
  naturally. 2nd Edition. (CICO Books, 2014, 2017 $34.95 CAD hardbound)   
  is by Isabelle Legeron, MW
  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. 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 the  "corrections" the   winemaker 
  needs to take (more acid, earlier/later picking, more sugar, more   irrigation, 
  etc.), but a  natural O or  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 gives notes on over 150 wines, sorted by types   
  (bubbly, red, white, orange, rose, sweet). Not surprisingly, France has the   
  most listings, followed by Italy: these are the two leaders by   production.  
  Other additional sections cover a glossary, lists of associations and wine   
  fairs, restaurants and stores for the US and UK, and a bibliography.
  --THE ESSENTIAL COCKTAIL BOOK (Ten Speed Press, 2017, 342 
  pages, $24.99 CAD hardbound) is by a former wine editor at Food & Wine   
  magazine, Megan Krigbaum. It is a guide to modern drinks with about 150   
  recipes. There is the usual primer on bar essentials covering ingredients   
  and glassware plus garnishes. This followed by the classic recipes (170   
  pages) and then the modern recipes (130 pages), ending with a collection   
  of syrups. All of the modern ones come from current bartenders at current   
  bars, all of the preps being sourced. Good photos for the presentation and   
  the garnishes. You won't need more than this charming tool unless you just   
  want to improvise on your own...and why not?
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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