DRINK   BOOKS OF THE MONTH!
  1a.WHEN CONCORD WAS KING! (Tellwell Talent, 2018, 163 pages, $31.87 CAD   Amazon.Ca papercovers) is by Jim Warren, an acclaimed amateur winemaker who   later started Stoney Ridge Winery, and who in 2000 joined the faculty of Niagara   College and assisted with the development of the Vineyard and Winery Management   Program, acting as both instructor and winemaker. In 1997 Jim was selected as   Ontario winemaker of the year (Ontario Wine Awards) and 10 years later received   the Cuvee Award of Excellence for his contribution to the wine industry. As a   consultant Jim has assisted with the creation of numerous new wineries and wines   in Ontario. "When Concord was King!" is a book exploring the early beginnings of   the wine industry in Eastern North America, focusing on Ontario. It's more than   just Concord grapes of course – it looks at all the "foxy" tasting grape wines   not made from V. vinifera (European varietals). V.labrusca is the most   prominent; indeed, it is called the fox grape. Cultivars and hybrids here   include Concord, Catawba, Delaware, Dutchess, Niagara, and Isabella. He begins   with the "southern fox" – North America's first wine – from Muscadine. He moves   through the centuries and arrives in Upper Canada in 1790. A big chunk of the   book deals with Ontario developments 1880 – 1980. He walks us through   Prohibition, the start of the LCBO, the Depression, the Second World War – and   Harry Hatch with Brights. It took until 1951 before vinifera was planted, when   chardonnay was grafted onto phylloxera-resistant root-stock. It was later   marketed as Pinot Chardonnay. This is a compelling read, made more vivid by   Warren's writing style. He's got his reference material cited, a series of   glosses in each chapter, and some critical notes and histories of many early   Eastern North American grape hybrids. There is no index, which is unfortunate,   but if you can get hold of the PDF or ebook version, then word searching should   be no problem for all the names and places. Quality/Price Rating: 91. 
  1b.FROM CONCORD TO CABERNET! stepping stones and milestones in Ontario's   wine making odyssey (soon to appear on Amazon.ca,  like the above book at   1a). It's a sequel from Jim Warren, relating the rest of the story from 1980   through 2020. And it has been forty years of dramatic action. Part one deals   with a short history of the immediate period before 1980, with French-American   hybrids and indications of the first cottage wineries in Ontario (Inniskillin in   1975, Chateau des Charmes in 1978, and Newark (now Trius) in 1979. Part two   covers 1980 through 2000, with the expansion of the cottage wineries building a   wine business that was quality-driven with limited production and family-run   ownership. By 1980 there were several sources of "wines", such as the   labrusca-based port-like and sherry-like wines sand others, the French hybrids,   vinifera, and "blend" with Ontario and imported wines. Still, in 1981 vinifera   had only a share of 5.6% of all vines. Jim has many stories about the 21 new   wineries that existed between 1975 and 1990. He covers the explosion of   winemaking in the Lake Erie North Shore region, Ontario icewine, the ethyl   carbamate scandal, the blending with imported wine, the threat of NAFTA and   government subsidies and competition – all leading up to the beginning of the   Vintners Quality Alliance (VQA) after 1990. He comments on the designated   viticultural areas and sub-appellations, the 2001 Asian ladybug infestation, and   tax reform. This is all intriguing, insightful commentary by an insider who has   been in the business for decades. The 1990s saw fruit wines, VQA expansions,   consolidation within the industry, the beginnings of agri-tourism and weddings   at destination wineries. The decade also saw Brock University and Niagara CAAT   take on wine business courses leading to degrees and diplomas, along with the   start of the Cool Climate Oenology and Viticulture institute at Brock and an   actual producing winery at Niagara. Throughout it all we read about Jim's   personal take on sales, marketing taxes, and LCBO listings, as well as life   reminiscences and his own winery, Stoney Ridge. Chapter 9 opens part three – the   new millennium post-2000. The names and numbers grow – to over 200 wineries   across Ontario. But through it all we still must not forget that the five   largest wineries in Ontario were responsible for 90% of that province's wine   production. And that 20% of industry winemakers in Ontario are owner-operators   of their own winery. Ontario winemakers and wineries are an inclusive community   with new approaches such as the issue of climate change and global warming,   green sustainability and organic/biodynamic principles, equality in hiring   practices, making appassimento wines, making orange wines – and sharing all of   this with others. To this end, Jim gives a fine appreciation of Larry Paterson,   the LCBO employee who took on tasting challenges to show that Ontario wines were   just as good as European wines, if not better in some cases. As Jim says, "The   story of Ontario wine is not a myth about becoming the "best" or the "greatest"   in the wine world but a saga of dinging success and soaring to new heights after   a long and determined odyssey to achieve greatness". There are a variety of   appendices. Appendix A looks at the current taxes, sales, and distribution of   alcohol in Ontario with some great insight in its clear explanation of a   complex, complicated subject [not for the faint of heart]. Appendix B lists the   Ontario Wine Awards' Winemaker of the Year in chronological order. Appendix C   covers the demise of various "ghost" wineries over the past few decades, going   back to 1980. And appendix D looks at two decades of progress by VQA Ontario.   This is a compelling read, made more vivid by Warren's writing style. He's got   his reference material cited, a series of glosses for each chapter, and some   critical notes and histories. There is no index, which is unfortunate, but if   you find  the PDF or ebook version, then word searching should be no   problem for all the names and places. Quality/Price Rating: 95.
   
 

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