ON THE DEAN'S LIST:  
   
  MY 23rd (!!)  ANNUAL SURVEY OF FOOD AND DRINK-RELATED BOOKS 
  SUITABLE AS HOLIDAY GIFTS FOR THE 2019/20 PARTY PERIOD
   
  NOVEMBER 19, 2019
  ==============================================================
   
  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 2019 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 UK (free   delivery and no GST).
   
  Price Alert: Books are in CAD, but because of USD fluctuations, all prices   may vary. 
   
   
  Part One: TOP GIFT BOOKS
  ========================
   
  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: 
   
  --PASTA GRANNIES; THE OFFICIAL COOKBOOK (Hardie Grant Books, 2019, 256   pages, $42.99 hardbound) is by Vicky Bennison who created the YouTube channel   "Pasta Grannies" five years ago. In her cookbook (and through the videos), she   has a mission to save traditions and share skills, one Granny Nonna at a time,   As 85-year old Lucia says, "when you have good ingredients you don't have to   worry about cooking. They do the work for you." Everyone has their own special   recipe and Bennison is capturing as many as she can before the nonne pass   on.  While the cookbook is arranged by type of food (nuts, veggies, pulses,   gnocchi, seafood, meat, brodo, ravioli), it is basically about the great divide   of dairy (butter, cheese) of the north and the tomato of the south. Diversity is   the name of the game. Profiles are given as well as background the the many   kitchens, so it is more than just a cookbook. These are the secrets of Italy's   best home cooks, and it is a wonderful gift for a hostess/holiday time.
   
   
  --BINGING WITH BABISH (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2019, 336 pages, $43   hardbound) is by Andrew Rea, a chef and filmmaker. He's created the eponymous   YouTube channel, and this is the resulting complementary cookbook...except it   also involves storytelling as it relates to 100 recipes recreated from fave   movies and TV shows (such as Homer Simpson's Space-Age Out-of-This-World Moon   Waffles, or The Godfather's Cannoli, or shrimp gumbo from Forrest Gump).    He's got details about the cooking show itself, plus a range of photography and   some memoir-material.  Outstanding are such classic dishes as the timpano   from Big Night,  prison gravy from Goodfellas,  and big kahuna burger   from Pulp Fiction. The ultimate giftbook...to food lovers or film lovers.
   
   
  --BINGE-WATCHING EATS (Ryland Peters & Small, 2019, 160 pages $19.95   hardbound) is a publisher's production, with themed snacks and drinks  for   your next binge TV watch, as pulled together by Katherine Bebo and Julia Charles   from  32 cookbook authors in the RP & S stable of writers. It's   arranged by theme: lawyer shows, sports, medical shows, police, murder, etc. 60   party recipes for TV shows.
   
   
  --SOUTH; essential recipes and new explorations (Artisan Books, 2019,    376 pages, $60 hardcover) is by Sean Brock, once chef of Husk restaurants. Now   he will have his own place in Nashville (working name: The Kudzu Complex,   serving Appalachian food and a tasting menu). His first cookbook "Heritage" was   both  a Beard and Child winner in 2015. He's also been a subject on The   Mind of a Chef and Chef's Table TV series. Here Brock goes all out with heirloom   and indigenous Appalachian ingredients. 125 recipes cover boiled peanuts, fried   green tomatoes, she-crab soup, grilled catfish, hoppin' john, pot of greens,   dirty rice, cornbread, buttermilk pie, BBQ, plus a Country Ham, Road Map. With   an eye on international sales, there are also metric conversion charts. It has   already been named one of the best new cookbooks of 2019 by a dozen   publications.
   
   
  --SHUK; from market to table, the heart of Israeli home cooking (Artisan   Books, 2019, 368 pages, $53 hardbound) is by Einat Admony and Janna Gur.    Admony is chef-owner of three NYC restaurants; Gur lives in Tel Aviv and has   authored some 40 other cookbooks. "Shuk" is an Israeli market and usually   features  Mediterranean culinary crossroad food, a sort of cultural melting   pot. The food here is flavourful, and comprises salad for breakfast, many   cooking techniques for veggies, rich stews and soups, couscous and chicken,   liberal use of lemon and oil, fresh herbs and lots of fish. These are 140 home   comfort food preps, with tons of tips and on-site photos of the shuk tour of   Israel. Included are Ethiopian chicken, Yemenite malawach sficha, crispy   za'atar, green shakshuka, and Jerusalem bagels.
   
   
  --NEW ORLEANS CELEBRATIONS (Gibbs Smith, 2019, 192 pages, $30 hardbound) is   by Kevin Belton, a local chef with a PBS New Orleans cooking show. It's   detailed, with sections on specific foods such as oysters, gumbo, crawfish,   boudin, catfish, hand pies, jambalaya, rice, blue crabs, fried chicken, beignet,   shrimp. This is followed by celebrations for the BBQ, the jazz festival,   Bastille Day, Oktoberfest, and the cultures of Greece and Sicily and Latin   America with explorations of neighbourhoods. Quite a nice package, well-laid   out, with useful directions. 
   
   
  --MADE IN MEXICO THE COOKBOOK; classic and contemporary recipes from Mexico   City (Rizzoli, 2019,  272 pages   $55 hardbound) is by Danny   Mena, chef at NYC's Hecho en Dumbo, with great endorsements by Rick Bayless and   Richard Sandoval. It's a flavourable and colourful work of preps and travel   about Mena's fave diners, fondas, loncherias, taco stands, and restaurants in   Mexico City, with recipes from the locals plus his own takes. This guidebook   covers the city's dining and cooking activities, how the natives drink and eat,   but with also a lot of relevant commentary. It's useful for any trip to Mexico   City, with the caveat that the tome weighs about  1.25 kilos. 
   
   
  --AMERICAN SFOGLINO; a master class in handmade pasta (Chronicle Books,   2019, 272 pages, $50 hardbound) is by Evan Funke, an American sfoglino (maker of   fresh pasta sheets called sfoglia) who rigourously trained with Bologna's   Alessandra Spisni (eight-time world champion pasta maker) and Japan's Kosaku   Kawamura. He's opened many restaurants in LA, but managed to find the time to   offer this massive work which has a powerful log-rolling endorsement from TEN   other chefs, many of whom  are Beard winners. It's arranged by 15 pasta   shapes, such as tagliatelle, strichetti, strozzapreti, and gnocchi di ricotta.   Each section has stories, recipes for sauces and accompaniments. Lots of   full-colour photos of techniques for preparing bowls, plates and stuffed pastas.   A great tome for pasta lovers. 
   
   
  --THE IMMIGRANT COOKBOOK (Interlink Books, 2018,  224 pages, $49.95   hardbound) is a collection of recipes and stories edited by Leyla Moushabeck,   with about 100 different contributors. Each prep section gives a recipe and the   story behind the recipe. Many of the sources behind each dish are professional   chefs, and their individual stories are related, from childhood to food success.   It has been endorsed by top chefs  – Ottolenghi, Waters, Deborah Madison,   David Lebovitz, and the late Anthony Bourdain. The publisher will donate $5 from   the sale of each cookbook to the ACLU.  It's arranged from apps to   desserts, and any of them certainly do beat the presidential mac and   cheeseburger. 'Nuff said.
   
   
  --TORTELLINI AT MIDNIGHT (Hardie Grant Books, 2019, 256 pages,  $35   USD hardbound) is by Emiko Davies, who is of mixed heritage but married a Tuscan   man and lives in Italy. These are heirloom preps from four generations deep and   many miles wide from Taranto in Puglia to Turin and then Tuscany in the north.   It has a lot of memoir material, the food is comforting, and the photography a   traveller's dream. There are great stories here for every dish. It is all   arranged by one of the three regions followed by a series of  seven menus   for larger holiday events (New Year's Day, Easter Sunday, All Saints' Day,   etc.), all with page references to the preps themselves.  Recipes are in   both metric and avoirdupois. Nifty gift package.
   
   
  --BALADI PALESTINE (Interlink Books, 2019, 256 pages, $49.95 hardbound) is   by Joudie Kalla, a UK professional chef who also wrote the cookbook "Palestine   on a Plate". "Baladi" means "my home, my land". Here she takes us on a culinary   journey through her homeland with rare Palestinian family recipes reflecting the   diverse landscapes and seasons. It's arranged by geographic feature, which   chapters on river and sea (salmon, sardines, sea bass, red mullet, monkfish, sea   bream, squid), hills and orchards (lime, pomegranate, mango, lemon, ice cream,   pastries), the farm (lamb, poultry), the earth (potatoes, beets, zucchini, fava   beans, shallots), the markets (coffee, eggs, turmeric, eggplants, chili). Each   dish has a story. Excellent photography too. 
   
   
  --BAKING WITH KIM-JOY: cute and creative bakes to make you smile (Hardie   Grant Quadrille, 2019, 176 pages, $34.99 hardbound) is by Kim-Joy, a finalist on   two UK TV baking competitions. It's a spiffy, colourful work that is essentially   a guide to decorating fun cakes, profiteroles, cookies, breads, macaroons. These   are really imaginative designs: some are easy, some are complicated, all are   enjoyable.  Of course there is much material on layouts, frostings,   icings,  and other decorations. The basic requirement is merely a steady   hand. She opens with an "easy" pistachio and cardamom cake with mango-saffron   jam, followed by a vegan chocolate cake with praline – and then begins to move   on to other enjoyments such as "pigfiteroles in mud".  All the photos are   very bright and colourful, and all the ingredients are listed in both metric and   imperial measurements. 
   
   
   
  --THE VIBRANT LIFE: eat well, be well (Chronicle Books, 2019, 240 pages,   $42.95 hardbound) is by Amanda Haas, a cookbook author who is also a former   culinary director for Williams-Sonoma.  She's got recipes, meditations, and   guidance on ways to well-being, from acupuncture through meditation, for the   midlife and beyond person. The 60 recipes emphasize self-care, and include   basics for salsa verde, preserved lemon gremolata, and cucumber salad. It's all   arranged by "best breakfasts", veggies and fruits, selected meats and seafoods,   and useful sweets. Plus about 14 items for the mind-body-spirit.
   
   
   
  --CALGARY EATS: signature recipes from the city's best restaurants and bars   (Figure.1, 2019,  233 pages, $38.99 hardbound) has been edited by Gail   Norton and Karen Ralph, who both edited the companion CALGARY COOKS. The is the   ninth work in the Canadian series of urban food and eating from Figure.1; others   included Edmonton, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, and Winnipeg. It's a   good second sampling of the cuisine scene in Calgary, with preps from    Alloy Dining, Cassis Bistro, Cilantro, Knifewear, Market (duck confit pot pie),   and others. Great food styling photos, as in all the rest of the series. And:   there are metric conversion charts!!
   
   
  --WE ARE LA COCINA (Chronicle Books, 2019, 288 pages, $36 hardbound) is a   collection of recipes in pursuit of the American dream. "La Cocina" ("kitchen"   in Spanish) is an organization that promotes foodways from all over the world.   It helps to develop food products, restaurants, food trucks, and food stall   concepts. It's a group which lobbies for inclusion and equity for   entrepreneurial women of colour and recent immigrants to the USA; all of the   royalties go back into La Cocina to support new entrepreneurs. There are 75   recipes here and stories from 40 successful alumni of the kitchen incubator.   These different foods (momos, albondigas, onigiri, et al) are accompanied by 150   photos by Eric Wolfinger.
   
   
  --ANDALUSIA (Hardie Grant Books, 2019, 256 pages, $57 hardbound) is by Jose   Pizarro, who owns three restaurants in London called (wait for it):  Jose,   Pizarro, and Jose Pizzaro. It's a good collection of local cuisine and preps   from Seville and other places within the Spanish region by the sea. He's got   some memoirish material plus lots of photos from Emma Lee. It's divided into 4   main sections of meat, fish, veggies, and desserts, plus some Andalusian menus   with a timeline of work routines  for the days before. This is followed by   a listing of places to eat in the area. Loaded with photos.
   
   
  --PROVENCAL (Pavilion, 2019, 256 pages, $47 hardbound) is by Alex Jackson,   owner of Sardine in London UK, which centres on Provence and the surrounding   Mediterranean area. So this is Southern French cooking with an emphasis on fresh   veggies, herbs, olive oil and breads. And it is seasonally arranged from Spring   through Winter, opening up with socca with artichokes and closing with the grand   bouffe of pot-au-feu. It's a charmer of a collection of preps, centred around   rusticity. But it is hard to find at a commercial restaurant even in Provence.   As the author says, "short of knocking on farmhouse doors, it's difficult to   piece it all together." You have to rely on books and do it yourself. So this   work is a good start to begin with, and then move on to Richard Olney and Robert   Carrier.  Nicely laid out with line drawings. Pissaladiere    anyone?
   
   
  --PROVENCE: the cookbook (Interlink Books, 2019, 208 pages, $43.95   hardbound) is by Caroline Rimbert Craig, whose fruit farmer heritage shines   forth in this collection of recipes from the French Mediterranean. There is much   detail (and photos) on how the locals eat and their customs over the years. The   Provencal larder is explored, with its olive oils, herbs and aromatics, garlic,   salads, preserved anchovies, wines, breads, cheeses, salt cod, nuts, and red   wine vinegar. The contents are arranged by season, from Spring through Winter.   Some faves of mine appear: salade de feves et d'asperges, pissaladiere, tarte de   blettes, and the wonderful sandwich des cyclistes! The range is from accras de   morue through soupe au pistou through tartines de truffes. Another great too for   the armchair traveller and/or the home chef. 
   
   
   
  --PARIS FOR FOOD LOVERS (Hardie Grant Travel, 2017, 2019, 176 pages, $28.99   paperbound) is by Elin Unnes. It was originally published in Swedish, but here   it has been updated for the 2019 English edition. It's a guide to the new Paris,   the 11th arrondissement (natural-wine restaurants, divey bars, market stalls,   alley lanes for unmarked restaurants, and more). Each has a photo and brief   description, plus the deets. She also covers other areas such as the 10th, 12th,   and 20th. Maps are included. Really an interesting work, written in   conversational style. 
   
   
  --ROME FOR FOOD LOVERS (Hardie Grant Travel, 2018, 2019, 176 pages, $28.99   paperbound) is by Peter Loewe. It was originally published in Swedish, but here   it has been updated for the 2019 English edition. It's a more traditional   organization, with chapters on  different types of places to eat at, food   stores, the outskirts of town, and the avoidance of tourist traps. Each has a   photo and brief description, plus the deets. Maps are included. Really an   interesting work, written in conversational style. 
   
   
  --TOKYO FOR FOOD LOVERS (Hardie Grant Travel, 2018, 2019, 176 pages, $28.99   paperbound) is by Jonas Cramby. It was originally published in Swedish, but here   it has been updated for the 2019 English edition. It's a personal guide arranged   by type of food served: ramen, tsukemen, udon, tempera, yakitori, curry, biru,   gyoza, tonkatsu, sushi, and izakaya. Plus locations of fast food, street food   and bars (beers and sakes). Each has a photo and brief description, plus the   deets. Maps are included. Really an interesting work, written in conversational   style. 
   
   
   
  --CATALAN FOOD (Clarkson Potter, 2018, 273 pages, $40 hardbound) is by   Daniel Olivella, a Catalan chef who opened Catalan cuisine restaurants in San   Francisco and Texas. His collaborator is Caroline Wright. Catalan cuisine is one   of the culinary crossroads: passing through were Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Jews,   and others. There is lots of material and photos about Catalonia and its food,   followed by recipes arranged by menu, beginning with small plates (pica pica),   veggies (verdur4s i legums), paella, seafood, meats (del corral), pork, breads   and desserts. A very useful armchair travel tool with many Mediterranean dishes.   
   
   
  --ETHIOPIA (Interlink Books, 2019, 224 pages, $49.95 hardbound) is by    Yohanis Gebreyesus, chef-owner of Antica in Addis Ababa and host of a weekly   food program on EBS, Ethiopia's  national television network. It's an   impressive work on Ethiopian cuisine, with many recipes and traditions noted   from the Horn of Africa. Its cuisine has been influenced by a religious    mix of Judaism, Christianity and Islam.  Typical dishes include dor wat   (chicken stewed with berber spice), siga ribs (fried beef), asa shorba (spiced   fish soup), gomen (collard greens with giner and garlic), azifa (green lentil   salad), dinich alicha (potatoes and carrots in onion turmeric sauce. Of course,   the tome opens with 
  injera and flatbreads, found in every global Ethiopian restaurant, followed   by seasonings, soup to nuts, through to drinks. Every prep is geographically   located and has a story as well as terrific photos. Where appropriate there are   thoughts from local artisans. 
   
   
   
  --TOKYO STORIES (Hardie Grant Books, 2019, 256 pages, $50 hardbound) is by   Tim Anderson. It's subtitle is " a Japanese cookbook" . It is more – it is a   tour through the various styles of food outlets in Tokyo: department store food   halls in the basement; top floor hotel restaurants; noodle shops; sushi bars;   yakitori shacks; convenience stores; vending machine foods;  and street   foods in general. You're going to find cheesy fried chicken, gyoza, ramen,   curries, udon, onigirl, and others. He's got 80 recipes with his memoir-like   stories and "on location" photography. It's arranged by food type (street,   local, national, global, modern) after a primer on depachika (Japanese   ingredients). Good fun for anyone who loves Japanese food. 
   
   
  --ANDALUZ (Interlink Books, 2019, 304 pages, $49.95 hardbound) is by Fiona   Dunlop, food and travel writer and photographer who has also written The North   African Kitchen and Mexican Modern. Here, wit an endorsement from Yotam   Ottolenghi she now covers the food, history, and culture of the south part of   Spain by the coast. Moorish rule of nearly eight centuries has created a   distinctly Arabian/Berberian influence on the food, with ingredients such as   couscous, rice, eggplant, oranges, olives, apricots, marzipan, and a wide range   of spices. With material on markets and both chef and home cook profiles, Dunlop   gives us a pretty determined travel/food look at a specific region, from Granada   (east) to Cordoba and Seville (south). Do try her mezquita salad (eggplant,   tomato and olives)  or mozarabic albondigas in almond and saffron sauce.   There's a listing of recommended restaurants, a bibliography, and two indexes to   the recipes (by course and by ingredient).  And, of course, there are her   own  photographs.
   
   
   
  --FOOD OF THE ITALIAN SOUTH (Clarkson Potter, 2019, 256 pages, $40   hardbound) is by Katie Parla, an American Rome-based food and beverage   journalist and author of the IACP award winner, "Tasting Rome" (2016). Here she   moves on "south" to Basilicata, Calabria, Campania, Molise and Puglia in a   travel journey of classic and lost dishes of tomato-based pasta-heavy Italian   food. Each rustic recipe has a cultural story to tell, and Parla does it well   in, um, parlaying it with insights. The arrangement is traditional, from   antipasti through dolci with a section on making your own amari and vermouths,   and concludes with a bibliography, a resources list, and conversion charts.   There is a whole section on the wonderful carrati con ragu di castrato (mutton   sauce in winter) and carrati con ricotta e noci (cheese and walnut sauce in   summer).
   
   
  --FROM THE LAND OF NIGHTINGALES & ROSES (Interlink Books, 2019, 318   pages, $49.95 hardbound) is by Maryam Sinaiee, an Iranian-born political analyst   but now full-time food blogger of Iranian food. It's casual home cooking of   Persian dishes,  arranged by season, beginning with Spring. Food history   and culture are also covered, along with her own food styling photography and   historical photos. Each season introduces memoir material about Iranian life   while the preps themselves have more historical and detailed instructions. Each   dish has a local name, such as kotlet for beef and potato fritters, Lamb preps   include braised shanks, ground meat kebabs, sweet and sour lamb, lamb and   eggplant stew, lamb and dried plum stew, rice with lamb and green beans, lamb   stew with dried limes, and other variations. It all concludes with a   glossary.
   
   
  --BLACK SEA (Quadrille, 2018, 280 pages, $50 hardbound) is by Caroline   Eden, an inveterate traveller who gives us a hefty tome that is part travelogue   and part  cookbook. It's the tale of Odessa, Istanbul, and Trabzon. Covered   are Bessarabia (65% of which is Moldova), Romania, Bulgaria, and Turkey – as   they border on the Black Sea. So it is a commentary on local foods, and embraces   memoir material on the Jewish tables of Odessa, fisherwomen of Bulgaria, and   White Russians in Istanbul. Of particular interest is the food of Trabzon   (Trebizond)  -- when did you last see a Trabzon cookbook?  She gives   us extensive food and cultural notes along with preps such as frontline pilaf,   Trabzon kaygana with anchovies and herbs, bebe cake, Sumela brunch,  and   apricot and cinnamon hosaf.
   
   
  --FELIDIA; recipes from my flagship restaurant (Appetite by Random House,   2019,  246 pages, $42 hardbound) is by Lidia Matticchio Bastianich, her   Chef Fortunato Nicotra, and her daughter Tanya Bastianich Manuali who has also   co-authored several cookbooks with Lidia. Felidia is one of the top Italian   restaurants in North America, and it is augmented by Lidia's empire of   entertainment production units (principally her PBS shows), her other   restaurants, her prodigious output of cookbooks, and her food line. The upscale   preps here come from her flagship restaurant, and include such oft-requested   items as polenta crackers, carrot spread, eggplant flan with tomato coulis,   capon broth with passatelli, gnudi, and a range of risottos and pastas. Not to   mention main courses and sides. This is a well-developed cookbook for the   Italian food lover. 
   
  B. And how about gift books for the beverage drinker? Try – 
   
   
  --FANCY AF COCKTAILS; drink recipes from a couple of professional drinkers   (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2019, 208 pages, $35.99  hardbound) is by    Ariana Madix and Tom Sandoval. It's the perfect gift for millennials: a loud,   brassy tome with lots of colour and photos of both the drinks and the authors.   With plenty of personal data too. The work has four main sections: classy,   trashy, shots and recovery – drinks for all occasions with bourbon, Champagne,   gin, Cointreau, margaritas, rum, vodka, whiskeys and more. Perhaps best taken in   small doses, but it is a readable and affordable guide. 
   
   
  --THE CURIOUS BARTENDER'S WHISKEY ROAD TRIP; a coast to coast   tour...US...(Ryland Peters & Small, 2019, 384 pages, $34.95 hardbound) is by   Tristan Stephenson, who has a whole range of  "The Curious Bartender's"   books. There is a road trip map listing some 44 distilleries from California,   Washington, Texas, and of course Kentucky and Tennessee. There are lots of   colour photos, play lists for the auto trip, and a description of each business   (along with tasting notes) including what to watch out for.  Oh, and there   are some nifty cocktail recipes. An absolutely perfect oversized tome for the   Bourbon, rye, and whiskey lover. 
   
   
   
  --ADVENTURES ON THE WINE ROUTE (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1988, 2013,   2019, 276 pages, $25 softbound) is by Kermit Lynch. It's his wine buyer's guide   of France, originally published in 1988 but with a 2013 addition of  a 33   page epilogue, a 2013 addition of "25 most memorable bottles of wines", and a   2019 affordable paperback reissue perfect for gifting. It's a classic work for   wine lovers, especially for French wine lovers. It's a highly influential look   at the wine trade as it is a record of Lynch's buying patterns (he was an   importer: these are his notes). 
   
  --LONELY PLANET'S GLOBAL DISTILLERY TOUR (Lonely Planet, 2019, 264 pages,   $26 hardbound) is from the publisher Lonely Planet  with contributions from   over three dozen writers. It;s a guide to tasting whisky, gin, bourbon and other   spirits at the world's best distilleries and bars. Over 30 countries are   covered, with regional drinks from Canada (10 pages), USA, Mexico, Japan, the   UK, and New Zealand. There are local itineraries that recommend top sights and   experiences, and a special section that showcases the world's best   cocktails.  
   
   
  --THE ULTIMATE SCRATCH & SNIFF GUIDE TO LOVING BEER (Flatiron Books,   2019, 12 boards, $28.99 hardbound) is by Richard Betts. Rotem Raffe did the   artwork. Together, with deft illustrations and sniffing they do a good job in   breaking down the ingredients, the science, and the processes behind how beer is   made and enjoyed. They claim that with this reference item the reader will have   the tools to make informed decisions. A fun work of art. 
   
   
  --FINE CIDER (Dog 'n' Bone, 2019, 176 pages, $27.95  hardbound) is by   Felix Nash, a cider merchant who looks at the history, the styles, the apple   varieties, and the processes of cider-making, He's also got material on   cider-producing regions, cider and food matches, and a great list of where to   start with the bucket list of ciders to try. Styles are important (I love cider   from Normandy or Brittany), but these are dependent on the varieties   available.  There is an art to blending and to using wild yeasts.   Cidermaking is a  lot like winemaking, substituting apples for grapes and   finishing with a lower alcohol content, usually at the top end of a beer level,   say 5 – 8% ABV.  There's the French style I like, usually at 4% ABV. There   is also Pet Nat (petillant naturel) , ice cider, still cider, and Champagne   method. A good too for those beginning to find their way into cider. 
   
   
  --BAR CART STYLE; creating super-chic cocktail stations (Ryland Peters   & Small, 2019, 128 pages, $19.95 hardbound) has been styled by Emily Henson.   It is basically how to put together a bar cart that makes a statement in its own   right for iconic cocktails and other alcoholic drinks. Carts are from the Art   Deco and Jazz Age period, but they are important simply because they are mobile   and free-up counter space. The bar basics are here, equipment is minimal as is   glassware, and there are some suggested recipes such as blackberry bellini, mai   tai, jalisco flower, dill acquavit, and the Negroni. A great inexpensive gift   for the millennial.
   
   
  C. Perhaps some food and drink reference books? Such as:
   
  --THE SIDE DISH BIBLE (America's Test Kitchen, 2019, 564 pages, $45   hardcovers) is an affordable look at 1001 great recipes for every salad, veggie,   rice, grain, fruit, and bean dish you might need to accompany a main dish –   right from a turkey down to a meatball.  The only thing missing is fresh   meat as a garnish, save for bacon and pancetta (with over 50 preps between   them). There are plenty of tips and advice to help the harried cook/chef to   easily find a perfect matching side dish for any occasion. There's 10-minute   Brussels sprouts, cauliflower salad, creamy farrotto (farro risotto), potato   galette. And it is a perfect cookbook for those who actually enjoy a meal of   side dishes (like me). One of the highlights of the holiday gift parade. 
   
   
  --THE BEST OF AMERICA'S TEST KITCHEN; best recipes, equipment reviews, and   tastings 2020 (America's Test Kitchen, 2019, 326 pages, $45 hardbound) is a   group effort from the PBS television show. It comes out in late summer but is   meant for the next year:  in this case, 2020. So all material here is   pretty well is written up by the spring of 2019. This is a" best of the best"   collection, active since 2007. It's arranged by course, from   starters/soups/salads through veggies, pasta/pizza/panini, meat, poultry,   seafood, breads, and desserts – with stops along the way for sides, breakfast   and brunch. There are concluding sections on test kitchen resources, nutritional   info, and conversion equivalents. Quite a lot packed into a handy package, and   excellent value (particular for the buying guides and the technique photo   displays).
   
   
  --YOU ARE WHAT YOUR GRANDPARENTS ATE: what you need to know about   nutrition, experience, epigenetics & the origins of chronic disease. (Robert   Rose, 2019, 320 pages, $37.95 paperbound) is by long time food author Judith   Finlayson who also writes about personal well-being and women's history. She   provides an up-to-date global overview of the science linking one's experience   as a fetus with the development of chronic illness later in life, and the   possibility that one will pass on lifestyle choices to future generations.   Epigenetics is the connection between our genes and  our environment: the   food we eat, the air we breathe, and the lifestyle we choose.  It's a good   basis for those millennials who try to understand where they are from and where   they are going. Nature and nurture are intertwined, and early life experiences   have an effect on diabetes, obesity, heart disease, cancers.  She does a   good job in making hard science accessible and readable. Something to think   about over the holiday seasons. 
   
   
  --SPICE (DK Books, 2018, 224 pages, $32 hardbound)  is a publisher's   reference work on spices. The scientific aspect has been written or overseen by   Dr. Stuart Farrimond, science and health writer, while British food writer Laura   Nickoll co-ordinated the non-science content of the spice profiles (the bulk of   the tool). The 120 pages dedicated to profiles divides all spices into phenols,   terpenes, acids, aldehydes, pyrazines, and compounds, with sub-divisions. Each   of the 60 profiles is connected to one or more of the 40 regional guides   presented. There are also 65 top-notch recipes. Eight other food writers, mainly   British, worked on the profiles, the regions, and the recipes. Great team work   for a food reference tool!
   
   
  --WHERE TO DRINK WINE (Quadrille, 2018, 288 pages, $42.99 hardbound) is by   Chris Losh, editor of Imbibe (UK). It's a guide to the world's must-visit   wineries. It you've got the big bucks to travel, there is enough here for a   lifetime (but start early). He opens with France and moves through Italy, Spain,   Portugal, Germany, Austria, Greece, North America (including both three places   in the Okanagan Valley and nine in the Niagara Peninsula), South America, South   Africa, the Antipodes, plus China, Georgia and Lebanon. Oh, if only they weren't   so scattered!!  Basically, it is a descriptive work for each wine region   with some commentary on those welcoming wineries such as, for Champagne,   Pommery, Taittinger, Mailly, Moet & Chandon, and more. He gives us multiple   reasons for each visit but no tasting notes. There is much to be seen at each   winery, such as visitor centres, museums, art work, knowledgeable staff, etc.   It's a must have reference tool for the bucket list!
   
   
  --THE CIDER INSIDER (Quadrille Books, 2018, 224 pages, $26 hardbound) is by   Susanna Forbes. It is a fairly comprehensive guide to over 100 international   craft ciders and their global styles. It's arranged by country, with the UK   getting the lion's share followed by France, and then Spain, Europe, North   America, and then the antipodes. There are glossaries and flavour guides   throughout, with a good bibliography of resources. There is not much for Canada   (four from Quebec and one from BC) which is probably as it should be since cider   production was not made legal in Canada until the 1970s. Its main contribution   is the glorious "ice cider" made like ice wine. Each company gets a detailed   description with deets on location and apples used, and where to go next for   more in that style. Currently, it is a pretty unique reference tool, well worth   reading. 
   
   
  --ITALY'S NATIVE WINE GRAPE TERROIRS (University of California Press, 2019,   376 pages, $70 hardbound) is by Ian D'Agata, the world's leading expert on   Italian wine. In 2014 he authored NATIVE WINE GRAPES OF ITALY. This current work   is all about the various DOCs and DOCGs in the wine production areas of Italy's   native wine grapes. Easy-to-read descriptions have easy-to-read geologic data,   biotype and clonal info, followed by producer interviews and comments.    Facts and figures provide the beginnings of in-depth analysis for the terroirs   that produce the great wines (Barolo, Chianti Classico, Brunello de Montalcino)   to the lesser-known Ischia and Turbiana. The slightly oversized tome has double   columns, so lots of information is given. It all comes complete with a glossary,   a bibliography, and three indexes. A brilliant giftbook for the demanding wine   lover!
   
   
  D. For the more literate person, there are the histories, "memoirs",   polemics  and humour of writers, chefs, and wine people. Some have called   these memoirs "creative non-fiction", some with embellishments and gilding. And   many of them may suffer from a lack of indexing, which makes it difficult to   find what the writer said about another person or subject. But this also avoids   the potential for lawsuits and disjointed noses. Nevertheless, they are   rewarding to read. Who cares about poetic license? Here then are some that stood   out from  this year's run, and any of them would make great gifts for the   reader. Here we go, in no particular order…
   
   
  --SAVE ME THE PLUMS; my Gourmet memoir (Appetite by Random House, 2019, 268   pages, $32 hardbound) is by the inspired Ruth Reichl, a great food writer with a   gripping-can't-put-it-down style – just perfect for the holidays. She's been the   restaurant critic for the LA Times, the NY Times, and then editor of Gourmet   magazine for a ten year gig. Then the magazine shut down, primarily because of   the incursion of the Internet where recipes abound. This is her story, her   memoir of the glamourous, high-stakes world of magazine publishing. Under her   management, Gourmet flourished as a cutting-edge food magazine, far from its   stodgy beginnings. It is also the story of how Reichl grappled with the changes   and how the changes affected her and then how the shutdown affected her. There   are about a dozen recipes here, but one caveat: no overall index to neither the   preps or the subject content. 
   
   
  --THE DEVIL'S DINNER (St. Martin's Press, 2018, 296 pages, $36.50   hardbound) is by Stuart Walton. It's a gastronomic and cultural history of chili   peppers. He also manages to go into depth about the biological impact, beginning   with Mexico and South America. Spaniards returning to Europe brought chilis back   with them, and this produced piri-piri and pimientos (Iberia), paprika in   Austro-Hungary, and permeated the Indian sub-continent. There is much detail   here in this look, culminating with a discussion on the hotness of chilis and   how it became a guy thing. Notes and a bibliography complete the work. 
   
   
  --WHAT MAKES A WINE WORTH DRINKING (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt,  2018,   182 pages, $36 hardbound) is by Terry Theise, an importer of boutique wines from   Germany, Austria and Champagne. He's also authored the title  "Reading   Between the Wines" and has written wine articles for magazines. Here he   concentrates on praising the sublime in wine. It's in a somewhat   autobiographical tone, but he does tell us how to find and appreciate   exceptional wine and how it can lead to a richer and fuller life. Just the   perfect gift for the oenophile in your life. What makes a wine worth drinking is   its authenticity: it's usually small-scaled artisanal wine of subtlety.    Taste matters, so that is first on the table in his tome – what does a good wine   actually taste like?  Enjoy...and try also 
https://hosemasterofwine.blogspot.com/2018/11/what-makes-wine-worth-drinking-in.html 
   
  --FRUIT FROM THE SANDS; the silk road origins of the foods we eat   (University of California Press, 2019, 374 pages, $43.95  hardbound) is by   Robert N. Spengler III, the Archaeobotany Laboratory Director at the Max Planck   Institute for the Science of Human History. He's traced the history of many   foods back to prehistoric Central Asia (the crossroads of the ancient   world)  and the Silk Road, from where the foods moved to Europe, America,   and East Asia. Covered then are apples, millet, barley, wheat, grapes, tea,   legumes, rice and others,  The exchange of goods started over 5000 years   ago, and the actual "organized" trade along the Silk Route can be traced back to   Han Dynasty China (206 BCE). The major source of evidence are the preserved   remains of plants found in archaeological sites. The Silk Road exchange   (overland route) and the "accidental" Columbian exchange (maritime route) were   similar attempts to get to the spices and foods of Central Asia. Fascinating   reading complemented by notes and references. 
   
   
  --BELLA FIGURA (Appetite by Random House, 2018, 284 pages, $29.95   hardbound) tells us how to live, love, and eat the Italian way. It's by Kamin   Mohammadi, a now-British journalist and broadcaster living and working outside   Florence and in London. Living in Florence had changed her life, and she makes   it a great spin on armchair travel. It's the "slow food" approach to life –   taking the time to do things well.  Her memoir opens in January 2008 and   moves through, monthly chapter by chapter, to the end of that year.  Topics   include: how to taste the sweetness of life, how to celebrate being a woman, how   to eat and not put on weight, and how style has nothing to do with money.    Recipes are scattered throughout, and at the end there is a summary of 21   different "rules". 
   
   
  --RITZ & ESCOFFIER (Clarkson Potter, 2018, 312 page, $35 hardbound) is   by Luke Barr who wrote the amazing bestseller "Provence, 1970".  He deals   with the hotelier Ritz and Chef Escoffier in the context of the rise of the   leisure class.  In essence, he covers not just the two men but also the   social aspects of the hospitality industry in the late 19th and early 20th   century. The Savoy in London was the first hotel with electricity and elevators;   all rooms had baths. "Toute le monde" stayed there, and Escoffier ran the first   restaurant in Europe to welcome unaccompanied women. Barr covers the   relationship between the two, and (after disaster and opulence) follows them to   Paris  and the Hotel Ritz. Notes and sources, plus an index, are included.   
   
   
  --AMERICAN CUISINE AND HOW IT GOT THIS WAY (Liveright Publishing   Corporation, 2019. 451 pages, $53.95 hardbound) is by Paul Freedman, author of   "Ten Restaurants that Changed America" . He's followed up on that earlier tome   by covering more of the Colonial period up through processed industrial food,   ethnic cultural diversified foods, and the farm-to-table movement. It's an   ambitious too, covering regional cooking styles of the colonies and the westward   evolution of the USA. His main thrust is the progression from regionality   through national standardization and then variety (as a backlash). Thoughtful,   interesting reading for the holidays. 
   
   
  --THE MUNCHY MUNCH COOKBOOK FOR KIDS (Familius, 2019, 170 pages, $28.99   spiral-bound) is by Pierre A. Lamielle, and award-winning kids' cookbook author   with titles such as "Alice Eats" and "Kitchen Scraps: a humourous illustrated   cookbook".  He's also competed on Top Chef Canada and Chopped Canada (which   he won). Great illustrations that even adults or new cooks will enjoy. These are   the essential skills and recipes every young chef should know, beginning with   ten pages of "safety". That deal with hot, sharp, and germs. 
   
   
  --COOKING CLASS GLOBAL FEAST! (Storey Publishing, 2019, 144 pages, $28.95   spiral bound) is by Deanna F. Cook, and it is  her third work in this   series meant for food adventures for kids. It's a tour of 44 ethnic dishes from   around the world – there's fried bannock bread from Canada, beans on toast from   the UK, soda bread from Ireland, kasha from Russia, mealie meal bread from South   Africa, coconut bread from Tonga, fried rice from China, et al. There are also   pop-out food passports, world language flash cards, flag stickers, infographics   for taste-test explorations of fruits, breads, veggies and ice creams from   around the world. Great fun for over the holidays.