FOOD AND DRINK BOOKS IN REVIEW FOR NOVEMBER 2018 [published monthly since   2000]
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  By Dean Tudor, Gothic Epicures Writing, deantudor@deantudor.com
  These food and wine book reviews are always available at www.deantudor.com  and http://gothicepicures.blogspot.ca
  Stocking stuffers should be at the very top of everybody's gift list this   Holiday season: something affordable from under $10 up to $25 CAD or so, and   these can also double as host gifts, being something small and lightweight. Most   of the books here are paperbacks. And of course, they can all stuff an adult   stocking. 
  A.Typical for food are:
  --SCANDIKITCHEN CHRISTMAS (Ryland Peters & Small, 2018, 160 pages,   $26.95 hardbound) is a foodbook by Bronte Aurell, Danish author and restaurateur   at ScandiKitchen Cafe. This is her fourth eponymous cookbook for Ryland Peters   & Small. These are traditional recipes from Scandinavia for the Christmas   holiday season, competing with the Victorian and the Prussian holiday feasts at   Christmas time. Typical are glogg (mulled wine) and hygge foods. She introduces   the Sandi pantry, and goes into Advent gatherings (with historical context on   how Advent is done in Scandinavia), biscuits and breads and cakes, Christmas   Eve  traditions, and the Yule smorgasbord. 
  --KOMBUCHA (Ryland Peters & Small, 2018, 96 pages, $19.95 hardbound) is   by Louise Avery of LA Brewery in the UK.  She, as founder, uses all natural   ingredients to brew health-boosting teas. The company supplies Selfridges, Whole   Foods, Planet Organic, plus many cafes. Here  are 30 preps for naturally   fermented and sparkling tea drinks, arranged by four bases: flowers, fruits,   veggies, herbs & spices. There is also a long and lengthy primer on    brewing basics and kombucha, followed by a UK-US web resources listing. 
  --CHEESE BALLS (Chronicle Books, 2018,112 pages, $24.95  hardcover) is   by Dena Rayess. It takes me back to the 1960s. I must admit that I have never   actually created a cheese ball from scratch. I've always made my creations from   leftover cheeses after a party, adding cream cheese or some soft cheese, nuts   and flavours to the basic leftovers. So here are 40 preps for making a cheese   ball from scratch, plus advice on shaping and decorating . A very useful volume   for party go-tos, game-day snacks, and picnics.
  --CHRISTMAS WITH DICKENS (Cico Books, 2018, 64 pages, $19.95 hardbound) is   by Pen Vogler. It has been abstracted from her earlier Cooking with Dickens.   This is the Christmas section, with lobster patties, pickled salmon, roast   goose, orange and red currant jellies, smoking bishop and punch. There is even a   recipe for hand-raised pork pie to keep in the larder for visitors (or escaped   convicts). 22 preps in all, followed by a very food bibliography for further   reading of Dickens and food.
  --THE ARTISANAL KITCHEN: BAKING FOR BREAKFAST, SWEETS & TREATS, PARTY   CAKES  (Artisan, 2018, 112 pages each, $17.95 each hardback) are three   parts of a series by Cheryl Day and Griffith Day, co-owners of the Back in the   Day Bakery in Savannah Georgia. Each deals with a specific theme -- there are 33   breakfast recipes for muffins, biscuits, eggs, and other sweet and savoury   dishes; there are 33 sweets and treats recipes for cupcakes, brownies, bars and   candies; and there are 36 decadent party cake recipes for festive occasions.   Warmly illustrated, and with conversion charts.
  --I [HEART] PUMPKIN (Ryland Peters & Small, 2018, 144 pages, $19.95   hardbound) is a compilation from RP&S authors pulled together by Alice   Sambrook. There are 60 preps, many by Brian Glover (17) and Hannah Miles (9),   with the balance by 21 other UK cookbook writers. All are meant for the winter   months, with soups, stews, pies and tarts.
  --THE OYSTER COMPANION (Firefly Books, 2018, 256 pages, $19.95 flexibound)   is by Patrick McMurray, the world champion oyster shucker (Guinness) who owned   Starfish in Toronto for over a decade before The Ceili Cottage. The work was   originally published in 2007 as Consider the Oyster. It's a great field guide   (now completely revised, expanded, and updated) to the complex nature of oysters   where tastes will vary over the seasons and location of the beds. It is also a   cultural history to the lore and call of the oyster. He compares the differences   between some 50 of the more popular varieties found world-wide. With recipes.   And it is small and flexible enough to be a portable guide. He's even got an   amazing tasting wheel which would freak out the oenophiles.
  --FOODIE CITY BREAKS: Europe (Dog 'n' Bone, 2018, 144 pages, $19.95   paperbound) is by Richard Mellor, a UK travel and food writer. It's a succinct   guide to 25 of the best cities in Europe for food, with about 10 recommendations   for each. France is the heavyweight here with three cities, but Spain and Italy   also have three each. So for Bordeaux, budget picks include Le Chien de Pavlov,   fine-dining at Garopapilles, modern bistro at Miles, La Cagette for breakfast,   bars, places for regional cuisine, wines, cafes, food markets, and so "local   secrets" .  This is an easily digestible summary of culinary scenes in   Europe – the perfect host gift. 
  --DINNER LIKE A BOSS (Hardie Grant Books, 2018, 152 pages, $28.99   paperbound) is by Katy Holder. It is a collection of some 50 recipes emphasizing   quick and easy healthy meals for busy families. These are mainly one pots   featuring meat or fish or just veggies with a global slant. There's the bibimbap   rice bowl, smoky Mexican chicken burgers, and crunchy fruit crumble.
  --BACON BEANS AND BEER (Gibbs Smith, 2018, 128 pages, $22 hardbound) is by   Eliza Cross who has written the prime reference work on bacon. This is a guy   foodbook, so it should be suitable as a host gift. The intent is to merge bacon   and beans into some dish and then pair it with a suitable beer. The range runs   from apps through to sweet treats.
  --THE AUBERGINE COOKBOOK (Ebury Press, 2018, 112 pages, $$21.99 hardbound)   is by Heather Thomas. The front cover promises 50 recipes to feed your   obsession, while the back cover promises 60 brand new recipes. Maybe the truth   lies in between...Serious cooks know that "aubergines" is UK-talk for   "eggplants".  Typical preps here are eggplant fritters with honey, Sicilian   eggplant pizza, Thai eggplant curry, and Szechuan-spiced eggplant. A good   all-round collection gathered within one set of covers.
  --DIET CHEATS COOKBOOK  (Vermilion,  2018, 128 pages, $21.99   paperbound) is by Heather Thomas who promises us that in this work all your fave   meals are made healthier. She's got some easy to follow Green, Amber, and Red   food lists, nutrition notes, and concise calorie data for each recipe. Just   about every recipe is title "Cheat's something", e.g. Cheat's Buffalo wings,   Cheat's hummus, Cheat's tiramisu, and the like. Still, there are 100 guilt-free   recipes here worthy of your attention to satisfy your cravings and maybe even   lose some weight. You start the day right, go light in the meals, and spend less   time in prep work. Hey, it works for me...
  --HOW TO SET A TABLE (Ebury/Clarkson Potter, 2018, 128 pages $21.99   hardbound) is a publisher's book, but this time it is a hardbound version of the   previous paperback. While the rules for entertaining company have relaxed (but   some may say "disintegrated"), you'll still want to know about placement of   knives, forks, glasses, napkins, etc. The range is from a last minute   get-together through brunches, picnics, and memorable dinners. Consoles and   trays are covered, but not trolleys.
  --FLATBREAD (Gibbs Smith, 2018, 128 pages, $19.99 hardbound) is by Anni   Daulter. The primer is mainly a few types of dough, such as "classic"   pizza-like, unleavened pan bread, sourdough, sweet dough (for dessert   flatbreads),  and toasted nut gluten-free flatbread. Plus, of course, you   can always buy naan bread, pita bread, lavash, tortilla, puff pastry, and   layered phyllo pastry. But the essence of the work are the toppings, dips and   drizzle, which includes a deconstructed BBT (bacon, basil and tomato).
  --STUDENT EATS (Ebury Press, 2017, 192 pages, $21.99 softbound) is by   Rachel Phipps who promotes easy, affordable good food on a budget. Of course you   don't need to be a student, just penurious. All meals are covered: breakfast,   lunch, solo dinners, food for friends, drinks. Most food is homemade such as   granola. There are chapters for leftovers, pantry meals, some menus for three   meals under $20. Of course, it is all written by a former student, now a   graduate, with a theme of "how I survived". British orientation, but then,   courgette sounds so much better than zucchini. Try the mushroom toasts with   tamago ribbons. 
  --KITCHEN CONFIDANT (Chronicle Books, 2018, 96 pages, $16.95 hardbound) is   another publisher's title, being billed as "an indispensable guide for the   baker, drinker, and cook".  Coverage includes ingredient substitution,   metric and avoirdupois conversions, basic tool kits and equipment, and the like.   I hate to tell them, but there is really no difference between Large eggs and   Extra-Large eggs. At least, not anymore. Have you seen them lately? 
  --SO YOU THINK YOU'RE A FOODIE? (Dog 'n' Bone, 2018, 128 pages, $19.95   hardbound) is by Alexandra Parsons. It was first published in 2012 and has since   been re-titled as above. There are 50 entries looking into the icons of foodism.   The range is from searching for the tastiest and most authentic food to   elaborate gastro experiences to food bores. Topics include science, salt,   Michelin stars, artisan produce, and "mystery" meats. Good for a laugh over the   holidays. 
  --FOR THIS WE LEFT EGYPT? (Flatiron Books, 2017, 2018,  130 pages,   $27.99 hardbound) is a humour work by humourists Dave Barry, Alan Zweibel, and   Adam Mansbach ("three of the funniest people I've ever created" -- G-D. It's a   Passover Haggadah for the Seder. Note: of course, it is a parody. The tome   itself is constructed from right to left, with the normal "front cover" being   the blurbs on the back cover. As it says, good Jews will no longer have to sit   through a lengthy Seder. The authors take you through every step, employing a   kosher blowtorch and ending with a celebratory brisket. Lotsa fun reading.
  --THE WORLD'S BEST BOWL FOOD (Lonely Planet, 2018, 224 pages, $19.99    paperbound) written by a variety of people and collated by the publisher – it's   a collection of 100 one-pot international recipes from bibimbap (Korea) to   chicken soup (Algeria) and pozole  (Mexico), bigos (Poland), and Eton mess   (UK). It's all comforting home-style food, arranged by course. There's something   for everyone here.
  --POULETS & LEGUMES (Rux Martin, Houghton Mifflin, 2018, 120 pages,   $22.50 hardbound) is from Jacques Pepin. These are his favourite chicken and   vegetable recipes, drawn from five of his previous cookbooks. The first half   deals with chicken: roast, peking-style, supremes, bouillabaisse, chasseur,   jardiniere – about 28 in all, ending with roast stuffed cornish hens. The parade   of 39 veggie preps includes artichoke hearts, asparagus, broccoli, carrots,   pumpkin, spinach – any of which can be used with poultry. A neat little   production.
  --SIMPLY CITRUS (Gibbs Smith, 2018, 128 pages, $ 19.99 hardbound) is by   Marie Asselin. It's a basic work on lemons, limes, orange, mandarin, grapefruit,   kumquat, and other varieties, arranged by type after the primer.
  --THE PESTO COOKBOOK (Storey Publishing, 2018, 218 pages, $25 paperbound)   is by Olwen Woodier, who has written other cookbooks such as the Apple Cookbook   and the Peach Cookbook. Here she gives us 116 preps for creative herb   combinations. Of course, any time you use herbs, you've maximized the   flavour.  It is basically a basil-based collection, but she does have 20   pages for making pestos from rosemary, scallions, cilantro, parsley, mint, lemon   thyme, fennel, arugula – and others. And of course the adventuresome cook   can  mix and match and continue to experiment. 
  --ASIAN TAPAS (Ryland Peters & Small,  2018, 144 pages, $19.95   hardbound)  has 60 recipes, with the major credits going to Jordan Bourke,   Carol Hilker, Jenny Linford, and Loretta Liu (although 15 writers in all were   involved). There is a primer on dough making, and then it is divided by form:   parcels, rolls, dumplings, fritters, frys, pancakes, ribs, grills, wings. ,These   are Asian small bites and apps, such as Vietnamese chicken and quinoa small   bites, sashimi and cucumber bites, green chili bhajis, Chinese duck breast   pancakes, beef bulgogi and rice noodle wraps. Something for everyone in the   ultimate graze party. Sake anyone?
  --DOSA KITCHEN (Clarkson Potter, 2018, 144 pages, $24.99 hardbound) is by   Nash Patel and Leda Scheintaub. It's all about a very popular street food in   India: thin, rice-and-lentil-based pancakes that can be stuffed with a variety   of fillings—even sweets. Dosas are naturally fermented and gluten-free; they can   be vegetarian (even vegan) and dairy-free as well. They give us a master batter   followed by 50 recipes for stuffings, chutneys, and cocktails. These are 18-inch   dosas, although the couple do make 32-inch dosas at their food truck.
  --101 AMAZING USES FOR TURMERIC (Familius, 2018, 144 pages, $18.95   paperbound) is by Susan Branson. Turmeric appears to be yet another superfood,   and the uses include alleviating illnesses and infections, such as allergies,   asthma, cataracts, colorectal polyps, Crohn's disease, lung cancer, alcohol   intoxication, common cold, depression, migraine, et al. It is also used for   beauty (itchy skin, insect bites, bruises) and arts and crafts (temporary   tattoos). Lots of footnotes with impeccable sources.
  --101 AMAZING USES FOR GARLIC (Familius, 2018, 144 pages, $18.95   paperbound) is by Susan Branson. Her divisions this time include health,   wellness, expunging pests, and unexpected uses. In the latter category you can   find its use as an aphrodisiac, disinfecting spray, fishing bait and lures,   glue, seasickness, splinters and wreaths. Lots of footnotes with impeccable   sources.
  --COOKING IN A SMALL KITCHEN (Picador Cookstr Classics, 2018, 257 pages,   $21 hardbound) is by Arthur Schwartz. The new Picador series comprises reprints   of cookbook classics, with a new foreword that explains why it is being   republished. Schwartz's work  was published in 1979 and was meant for   cramped quarters. The cookbook is both practical and timeless, as Lidia   Bastianich noted in her foreword. Schwartz, an amazing food writer and editor in   NYC, went on to write six more cookbooks. 
  --THE CONFIDENT COOK (Picador Cookstr Classics, 2018, 241 pages, $21   hardbound) is by Irena Chalmers, with a new foreword by Anne Willan. The 200   practical preps here use any or more of the five basic cooking methods. Once   you've mastered those five, such as poaching, roasting, broiling, you can spin   off. A simple beef stew can also become a Mulligan or a bourguignon. Chalmers   wrote over 80 cookbooks, but this one is directed to new cooks. 
  B.Other little books, for beverages, include those on coffee, beer, wine   and spirits – and even water:
  --H2OH! (The Countryman Press, 2018 ,122 pages, $17.50 hardbound) is by   Mimi Kirk, who has also written books about raw foods and smoothies. Water (and   hydration) is great she says, but infusions help you drink that water. This   all-organic work gives us the tastiest and healthiest infusions of veggies,   fruits and herbs. Why pay $6 a bottle when you can make it for a nickel?    Plus, you can produce infused ice cubes for other drinks as well. Basil water is   a fave of mine, as is strawberry and thyme. Scores of recipes and variations.   Neat book
  --NIGHTCAP (Chronicle Books, 128 pages, $24.95 hardbound) is by Kara   Newman. She's got more than 40 simple cocktails to close out any evening,   whether you are looking to keep the night going or soothe yourself to sleep, end   a meal with a sweet or a digestif. I want to go to sleep, so I'd try the DejaVu   All Over Again (amaro – Aperol -- Lillet) or Pleasant Evening (creme de cassis –   Champagne), Well worth looking at for ideas. 
  --BEER HACKS (Workman Publishing, 2018, 158 pages, $24.95 hardbound) is by   Ben Robinson. There are 100 tips, trick, and projects here, including a total   beer vacation at Starkenberger Brewery in Austria, making authentic bratwurst by   boiling in beer,  and getting better sleep with hop flowers rubbed into   your pillow. Some tips use wedding rings, others will eliminate coffee stains,   yet another will give you luxurious beer hair. Chacun a son gout. This will be   for the beer drinking guy....
  --SESSION COCKTAILS (Ten Speed Press, 2018, 154 pages, $24.99 hardbound) is   by Drew Lazor and the Editors of the Beard winning online drinks site, Punch.   It's a worthwhile collection of more than fifty low-alcohol drinks for any   occasion, all designed to highlight flavours. Very appropriate for brunches.   Most of the drinks are based on sherry, amaro, vermouth, wine and liqueur.    There is the Rebujito (sherry, mint, lemon, lime) and the Hop Skip Jump (Cynar,   Punt e Mes, lemon, lime). Lazor also offers some tips on stocking the lo-al bar   and recreating fave cocktails at low proof (eg., Negroni, Manhattan,   Margarita).  There are even some advices on making large drinks in   batches.
  --STUFF EVERY BEER SNOB SHOULD KNOW (Quirk Books, 2018, 144 pages, $10.95   hardbound) is by Ellen Goldstein, who gives us a thumbnail coverage of just   about everything in beerland. The basics describe what beers there are, the   production process, glasses, tasting beers, storage, draught beer, hosting a   tasting, and a large section on resources for further data. There's a lot of   good stuff in these few pages – at an affordable price. 
  --LEMON WITH ZEST (Chronicle Books, 2018, 96 pages, $22  hardbound) is   by April White. She's got 40 thirst-quenching recipes for lemon juice and lemon   mix refreshments (with or without alcohol). Extremely useful for lemonade   stands, picnics, barbecues, and any get-together.. It's arranged by form:   liquids, ice pops, sorbets, and granitas.
  --TEQUILA: shake, muddle, stir  (Hardie Grant Books, 2018, 143 pages,   $24.99 hardcovers) is by Dan Jones who has got a string of books on gin and rum.   He's got 40 preps here for tequila and mezcal. There's the Teqroni (substitute   mezcal for gin), Tequila Mockingbird, Mexican Mojito, and Frozen Mango Margie.   Great fun. 
  --TEQUILA BEYOND SUNRISE (Ryland Peters & Small, 2018, 64 pages, $17.95   hardbound) is by Jesse Estes, a London bartender and son of Tomas Estes,   European Tequila Ambassador for the Mexican government. He's got over 40 recipes   here for tequila and mezcal-based cocktails on a global scale. Check out   Horchata Borracha, Death Flip and Blue Daisy. Hola!
  --PROSECCO DRINKING GAMES (Dog 'n' Bone, 2018, 64 pages, $17.95 hardbound)   is by Abbie Cammidge who, with her gal friends, have created or refashioned 29   drinking games for millennials. You just pick a game and pour some bubbles. My   fave is the Raspberry Ripple where you have to toss berries into your opponent's   glass – from a distance. Messy but effective. Any way – it is party time!
  --GREAT WHISKEYS. New edition (DK Books, 2018, 384 pages, $19 paperbound)   was first issued in 2011 (and was based on WORLD WHISKEYS form 2009). This new   edition is based on the 2016 edition of WORLD WHISKEYS. It's a collection of   thumbnail profiles of more than 500 of the best whiskeys from around the world.   Charles MacLean is again the editor of this user-friendly pocket guide He's got   a core of six other global contributors for the tasting notes and photography:   each drink has a current label photo and notes covering eligible quaffs. For   example, The Glenrothes  alone has four entries! The guide even has whiskey   tours around producing areas to help plan any whiskey trip. 
  --THE BARISTA BOOK (Skyhorse Publishing, 2018, 128 pages, $19.99   paperbound) is by Hiroshi Sawada, an award winning coffee barista and latte   artist. It was originally published in Japan in 2013 as a coffee lover's   companion with brewing tips and over 50 recipes for coffee drinks. Included are   lattes, Americanos, cappuccinos, espressos, cafe au laits, and iced drinks   (among the principal preps) . A great tool for that coffee lover relative or   friend.
  --ROSE COCKTAILS (Ryland Peters & Small, 2018, 64 pages, $17.95   hardbound) is by Julia Charles, a UK lifestyle writer-editor. She's got 40   pink-wine based drinks – another way to use rose wine, every style of drink from   short to long, still to sparkling, sharp to sweet, and fun to fancy. Bartenders   are using rose as a base for more complex drinks. This stocking stuffer is   arranged by type: aperitifs, sparklers, spritzers, coolers, slushes, crushes,   punches and pitchers. A nifty reference for the warmer times of the year.
  --THE WINE LOVER'S APPRENTICE (Skyhorse Publishing, 2018, 160 pages, $21.99   hardbound)  is by Kathleen Bershad who runs a wine consultancy business,   Fine Wine Concierge; they help clients buy, sell, taste, organize, and learn   about wine. This is her WINE 101 book, which covers how to taste, grape   varieties, reading restaurant lists and wine store shelves, and having a wine   tasting. The rest of the work is a series of profiles for each of the major wine   growing areas in the world, plus a useful glossary. Good stuff for the newbie.   
  --DRINKING DISTILLED (Ten Speed Press, 2018, 170 pages, $22.99 hardbound)   is by Jeffrey Morgenthaler, a bar director in Portland OR who has written The   Bar Book. This is a basic work about "drinking" - with guidelines to toasting   and drinking with a crowd,  drinking games, glassware, drinking and   driving, hangovers, and barfing. Then he examines what you are drinking: spirits   and cocktails. This is followed by when you are drinking: breakfast, brunch,   lunch, dinner, special occasions (with appropriate recipes). Next up is where   you are drinking: work, bars, home, friend's house, on the road, sporting   events. And these are with even more recipes. 
  --GINSPIRATION (DK Books, 2018, 144 pages, $18.99 hardbound) is by Eric   Grossman and Klaus St. Rainer. The material was previously published in larger   books dealing with spirits and cocktails. This is the extraction of the gin   pages, with the photography. As such, it's a nifty gift for a gin-loving   host/hostess. These are some of the best preps for cocktails and infusions,   including the martini, French 75, gimlet, gin fizz, gin sling, pink gin, London   buck, and more. There is material on equipment, juices, sugars and syrup, as   well as ice. The Gin A-Z section covers the wide world range of various styles   of bottled gin, with bottle shots. As for the matter of bruising, I'll leave it   up to you....
  --THE CURIOUS BARTENDER'S GUIDE TO GIN (Ryland Peters & Small, 2016,   2018, 192 pages, $19.95 hardbound) is by Tristan Stephenson, It's an abridgement   of his earlier 2016 work The Curious Bartender's Gin Palace.  Most of the   work is concerned with the history of gin and how gin is made, with about 45   pages of cocktail recipes. Good value for under $20.
  --FROM DRAM TO MANHATTAN (Ryland Peters & Small, 2018, 64 pages, $13.95   hardbound) is by Jesse Estes who concentrates on Canadian, Scotch, American,   Irish and Japanese whiskys, with relevant local recipes for each type, a total   of 40 preps. Covered are old fashioneds, sours, manhattans, juleps, highballs.   Great price for a well-illustrated foodbook.  
  --BEER AND FOOD MATCHING (Dog 'n' Bone, 2014, 2018,  222 pages, $19.95   hardbound) is by Mark Dredge, who goes after the finest foods and the finest   craft beers in the world. This is a second edition. The first part of the work   covers beer styles, from light through dark. The second part details matching   food with beer, with notes on why that match, but no recipes. The last 50 pages   is crammed with recipes to use in cooking with beer, such as scotch ale pork or   stout beans. 
  --HUGH JOHNSON'S POCKET WINE BOOK 2019 (Mitchell Beazley, 2018, 336 pages,   $18.99 hardbound, $14.99 Kindle ebook)  is a guide to wines from all around   the world, not just to the "best" wines. It is in its 42nd year. Johnson claims   more than 6000 wines and growers are listed. News, vintage charts and data,   glossaries, best value wines, and what to drink now are here. His book is   arranged by region, with notes on the 2017 vintage and a few details about the   potential of 2018, along with a closer look at the 2016. He's got notes on what   wines are ready to drink in 2019.   Johnson is  also moving into   food pairing: there is a section on food and wine matching. He also has a   listing of his personal 200 fave wines.  The Kindle edition is digitally   enhanced for word searching, so it often beats a printed index for retrieving   data – and it is $4 cheaper! Great purchase....
  --A YEAR OF GOOD BEER 2019 PAGE-A-DAY CALENDAR (Workman, 2018, 320 pages,   $19.99) 
  quenches the beer lover's thirst: microbrewery recommendations, beer lore,   trivia, labels, vocabulary, tasting notes, beer festivals, and more daily fun.   Discover a Colorado ale whose smoky coffee notes lend an almost porter-like   aroma profile; a hoppy Brooklyn lager; and a perfect summer aperitif in the   burgundy-hued Brombeere Blackberry Gose. Includes beer drinking games (like   Buffalo Club, in which you must never be caught drinking with your right hand),   recipes for refreshing beer cocktails, and "Hop Lookout" notes (like the   smoothly bitter Cashmere, developed by Washington State University in   2013).  Some of the beers appear as imports in Canada, but otherwise there   are few Canadian brews included. Lights, wheat, lagers, ales, porters, stouts,   seasonal beers, and lambrics – they're all here, 165 or so craft beers. If you   buy any of the PAD calendars, then you can go online to the website and pick up   other, free stuff, at www.pageaday.com.  
  --A YEAR OF GOOD WINE 2019 PAGE A DAY CALENDAR  (Workman, 2018, 320   pages,  $19.99)
  is similar in set-up. This is from Karen MacNeil, "America's missionary of   the vine" (Time magazine). It's like a  year-long wine course in a   calendar. Adapted from the New York Times bestselling The Wine Bible, with   650,000 copies sold, it features recommendations for the best bottles from   around the world, tasting notes, in-the-know wine facts, mouth-watering recipes,   and more (Loire-valley French whites, like Sauvignon Blanc, which has an herbal,   lime-scented freshness, crisp Gruner Veltliner with grilled fresh asparagus for   a light summer dish, tips on spectacular bottles within a budget, wine   horoscopes that match each sign with the right wine, and an Ask Karen   section—Q&As that address wine queries and curiosities. 
  --A YEAR OF GOOD WHISKY 2019 PAGE A DAY CALENDAR (Workman, 2018, 320 pages,   $19.99) adapted from A Field Guide to Whisky by Hans Offringa,  It features   313 entries, including advice on choosing, buying, and drinking whisky like a   pro, trivia about the process of aging, distillation, and history. Plus   whisky-related quotes ("There is no bad whiskey. There are only some whiskeys   that aren't as good as others."—Raymond Chandler); tasting notes; and    recommendations—like Macallan 12 Year Old Double Cask, characterized by vanilla,   citrus, and light oak, combined with rich fruit, sherry, and spicy wooden notes.   It's the perfect gift for anyone with a taste for whisky's ineffable appeal.   
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  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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