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Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Media Tasting with Ann Sperling and Peter Gamble Nov 14/13

The Date and Time: Thursday, November 14, 2013  1PM to 5:15PM

The Event: Media tasting with Ann Sperling and Peter Gamble: Argentina meets BC meets Nova Scotia.

The Venue: Fine Wine Reserve

The Target Audience: wine media

The Availability/Catalogue: most wines are at the LCBO in some format.

The Quote/Background: This was a tasting of their "out-of-province" wine portfolio, of soon to be released wines.

The Wines:

 

**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):

-Benjamin Bridge Blanc de Blanc 2004 MC Nova Scotia, $280 N/A – my fave

-Benjamin Bridge Reserve Brut 2007 MC Nova Scotia, $280 +275396 $74.95

-Sperling Vineyards Estate Brut Sparkling 2008 MC VQA Okanagan, +361436, $39.95

-Sperling Vineyards Estate Old Vines Riesling 2011 VQA Okanagan, +361204, $34.95

-Versado Reserva Malbec 2010 Single Vineyard Lujan de Cuyo Mendoza, +316984, $59.95

 

***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (8890 in Quality/Price Rating terms):

-Sperling Vineyards Estate Sper…itz Moscato 2011 VQA Okanagan, +364166, $12.95 375 mL

-Versado Malbec 2012 Lujan de Cuyo Mendoza, +317008, $25.95

-Clos du Soleil Signature 2011 VQA Okanagan [Bordeaux-type red blend]

-Clos du Soleil Capella 2011 VQA Okanagan [Bordeaux-type white blend]

 

The Downside: nothing

The Upside: on the way to the Gourmet Food & Wine Expo

The Contact Person: versadowine@gmail.com

The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 91.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Champagne Deutz tasting Nov 5/13

The Date and Time: Tuesday, November 5, 2013  10AM to noon

The Event: Champagne Deutz tasting with Export Director Philippe Rivet and the team from his Ontario agency, Tandem Selections.

The Venue: Independent Wine Education Guild Toronto offices

The Target Audience: wine media

The Availability/Catalogue: mostly from the agent.

The Quote/Background: M. Rivet spoke to his company before we tasted the wines – they use first pressings only, 80% of their total acreage is Grand or Premier Cru (mostly around Ay), and they use the same distinctive unique bottle shape for all labels. There was a visual tour of the facilities and vineyards, as well as graphs and charts.

The Wines:

 

**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):

-Deutz Brut Rose NV, $79.95 - strawbs

-Deutz Brut 2006, $94.95

-Deutz Blanc de Blancs 2007, $109.95

-Deutz Cuvee William Deutz 2000, $199.95 – my personal fave of the tasting (1998 is in BC), nicely decomposing.

-Deutz Amous de Deutz 2005, $229.95 – chardonnay, slightly off-dry

 

***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (8890 in Quality/Price Rating terms):

-Deutz Brut Classic NV, $64.95

 

The Contact Person: crupcic@tandemselections.ca

The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 90.

Monday, November 25, 2013

Taste Canada Book Awards Gala Nov 4/13

2. The Date and Time: Monday, November 4, 2013  6:00PM – 10PM

The Event: Taste Canada; the food writing awards 2013

The Venue: Arcadian Court

The Target Audience: food writers, media, publishers

The Quote/Background: The Food Writing Awards drew 64 submissions, for eight categories (four in each of French and English). The Gala Reception was hosted by CBC's Stefano Faita. Other awards were for Taste Canada/CBC People's Choice Book Award (Vegetarian's Complete Quinoa Cookbook) and the new Hall of Fame inductees (Elizabeth Baird, Mere Emelie Caron, and Helen Gougeon), plus awards for student food competition winners.

 

The Book Winners: for the English language,

 

--BEST Culinary Narrative – French Kids Eat Everything (And Yours Can Too), by Karen Le Billon (Harper Collins).

 

--BEST General Cookbook – Canada's Favourite Recipes, by Rose Murray and Elizabeth Baird (Whitecap Books).

 

--BEST Regional/Cultural Cookbook – Burma: Rivers of Flavor, by Naomi Duguid (Random House Canada).

 

--BEST Single Subject Cookbook – The Book of Kale: The Easy-to-Grow Superfood; 80+ recipes, by Sharon Hanna

 

The Alcohol Beverages: there were beers from Alexander Keith's (but no cider)—India Pale Ale, Cascade Hop (Washington) Ale, and Hallertauer Hop (Bavaria) Ale. The Niagara Teaching College Winery sent along their Unoaked Chardonnay 2011 (4 stars) and their Merlot 2009 (3 stars).

The Food: There were nine stations of food for us to sample afterwards:

 

-Chef Joshua Dyer (EPIC, Fairmont Royal York): Ontario elk tenderloin bresola, chevre, quince, marrow and balsamic.

-Chef Matt Dean Pettit (Rock Lobster)- for the second year in a row he left early when cleaned out of Nova Scotia lobster rolls, butter poached vanilla lobster spoons, and lobster deviled eggs (poached with beet juice)

-Chef Brad Lomanto (Cambridge Mill Restaurant): cardoon ravioli, tongue bacon, celery.

-Chefs Michael Robertson and Jamie Meireles (Oliver & Bonacini): maple and chili smoked Pacific salmon, preserved peach and squash pickle, sage crème fraiche, and grilled bannock.

-Chef Vanessa Yeung (Aphrodite Cooks): pork pot stickers, carrot and daikon radish slaw.

-Chef Tawfik Shehata (Toronto International Centre): Willow Grove Hill pork milk braised, Alberta barley cake pan-fried, jalapeno, chick pear flour, eggs – my overall fave!!

-Chef Wanda Beaver (Wanda's Pie in the Sky): sour cherry tarts, meyer lemon tarts, pecan squares.

-Chef Dufflet Rosenberg (Dufflet Pastries): caramel dacquoise of hazelnut meringue and white chocolate, cappuccino dacquoise, and hazelnut dacquoise.

 

The Downside: I had previously killed my tasting palate in the afternoon at the ICE show.

The Upside: it was terrific congratulating all the winners!

The Contact Person: debby@mdgassociates.com

The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 94.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

18th annual Italian Wine Tasting, Roy Thomson Hall Nov 4/13

The Date and Time: Monday, November 4, 2013  11AM to 5PM

The Event: A Tasting of Wines from Italy, 18th edition in Toronto

The Venue: Roy Thomson Hall

The Target Audience: wine trade

The Availability/Catalogue: most everything is available via the normal LCBO distribution programs, or by private order. There were a few wineries seeking agents, with "unavailable" products for retail sale.

The Quote/Background: I usually enjoy this show when I do the serendipity approach. This year I tasted just a few whites such as moscato d'Asti at the end. I did not do consecutive tables: I went end to end, getting a walk out of it and meeting new people.

The Wines: I did not try every wine, and retail prices were spotty in their availability.

 

**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):

-Masi Amarone della Valpolicella Classico Riserva di Costasera 2007, $64.95 Con Authentic

-Masi Amarone della Valpolicella Classico Mazzano 2007

-Ciu Ciu Offida Rosso 2006 Esperanto organic, $38.95 PO Le Sommelier

-Amastuola Puglia IGP Vignatorta Syrah 2010, $14 C&E Worldfinds

-Aurelio Settimo Barolo Riserva Rocche 2004 Profile

-Benedetti Amarone della Valpolicella Classico Croce del Gal 2006, $115 Tre Amici

-Bersano Vini Barolo Badarina 2008 Profile

-Bersano Vini Moscato d'Asti San Michele 2012 Profile

-Cononica Cerreto Chinati Classico Riserva 2008, $21.95 Frontier

-Cantine di Marco Salice Salentino Riserva 2008, United Stars

-Castorani Iarno Rosso Colline Pescaresi IGT 2009, $62  Vinexx

-Cesari Gerardo Amarone della Valpolicella Bosan 2005 Profile

-Cusumano NOA Sicilia IGP 2010  Family

-Latium Morini Amarone della Valpolicella Campo Leon 2009, BND Wines

-Manfredi Barbaresco Umberto Fiore 2008, $17 LCBO

-Marchesi di Barolo Barbaresco Tradizione 2010  Majestic

-Michele Satta Toscana IGT Cavaliere 2006 Majestic

-PWS Barolo Colarej Gemma 2008  Ruby

-Ruffino Brunello di Montalcino Greppone Mazzi 2007   Constellation

-Ruffino Toscana IGT Modua 2010  Constellation

-Luce Brunello di Monalcino 2008  Authentic

-Valentina Cubi Amarone della Valpolicella Classico Morar 2006  Vino Allegro

-Moscato d'Asti Castello del Poggio 2012, $11.10 LCBO

 

***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (8890 in Quality/Price Rating terms):

-Masi Amarone della Valpolicella Classico Costasera 2009, $39.95

-Masi Amarone della Valpolicella Classico Campolongo di Torbe 2007

-Masi Amarone della Valpolicella Classico Vaio Armaron Serego Alighieri 2007 Authentic

-Ciu Ciu Offida Pecorino 2012 Merlettaie, $18.95 PO Le Sommelier

-Ciu Ciu Rosso Piceno Superiore 2009 Gotico, $19.95 PO Le Sommelier

-Amastuola Salentino Primitivo IGP 2011, $16 C&E Worldfinds

-Amastuola Puglia IGP Onda del Tempo 2010, $20 C&E Worldfinds

-Aurelio Settimo Barolo Riserva Rocche 2005

-Aurelio Settimo Barolo Riserva Rocche 2006

-Bersano Vini Barolo Nirvasco 2009 Profile

-Cononica Cerreto Chianti Classico 2009, $16.95 Frontier

-Cononica Cerreto Toscana IGT Sandiavolo 2007, $24.95 Frontier

-Castoriani Podere 2008 Riserva Montepulciano d'Abruzzo, $42 Vinexx

-Castoriani Amorino 2007 Montepulciano d'Abruzzo, $30 Vinexx

-Cesari Gerardo Amarone della Valpolicella Classico It Bosco 2007 Profile

-Clavesana Siamo Barolo Olo 2009, $40

-De Angelis Rosso Piceno Superiore Oro 2009 Marche, $18.95  Ruby

-Fatt. Cabanon Oltrepo Pavese Cuoredivino La Botte No. 18 2010, $27.95 Glencairn

-Feudo Disia Sicilia IGT Tornamira 2008, $30  Bassoalto

-Gruppo Italiano Vini Santi Amarone della Valpolicella Santi 2008, PMA

-Manfredi Barolo Patrizi 2008  HHD Imports

-Manfredi Barolo Patrizi 2009  HHD Imports

-Marchesi di Barolo Barolo Tradizione 2008  Majestic

-Michele Satta Bolgheri Superiore I Castagni 2006  Majestic

-Pietro Rinaldi Barolo Monvigliero 2009  Connexion

-PWS Barolo Gemma 2009  Ruby

-Ruffino Chianti Classico Riserva Ducale Oro 2008

-Ruffino Chianti Classico Riserva Ducale 2009

-Valentina Cubi Amarone della Valpolicella Classico Morar 2007  Vino Allegro

-Wineoclock Amarone della Valpolicella 2008  Wine world

-Zeni Amarone della Valpolicella Classico Vigne Alte 2009, $39.95  Frontier

-Banfi Alta Langa Cuvee Aurora Rose 2009 Sparkling, $23 Authentic

 

*** GOOD -- Three Stars (8587 in Quality/Price Rating terms):

-Provincia di Pavia IGT Cavit Moscato 2012, $11.95 Noble

-Farnese Fantini Cuvee Cococciola $20 Authentic

 

The Food: cheeses, cold cuts, prosciuttos, meat balls, veggie pastas, breads, catered by Cibo Wine Bar

The Downside: too many wines to try in one day, and there was also a high security level.

The Upside: a chance to taste what I really wanted.

The Contact Person:  p.titone@ice.it

The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 88.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

WORLD WINE WATCH (LCBO VINTAGES TIP SHEET) FOR NOVEMBER 23, 2013

WORLD WINE WATCH (LCBO VINTAGES TIP SHEET) FOR NOVEMBER 23, 2013
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
By DEAN TUDOR, Gothic Epicures Writing deantudor@deantudor.com.
Creator of Canada's award-winning wine satire site at
http://fauxvoixvincuisine.blogspot.com. My Internet compendium
"Wines, Beers and Spirits of the Net" is a guide to thousands of news
items and RSS feeds, plus references to wines, beers and spirits, at
www.deantudor.com since 1994. My tastings are based on MVC (Modal
Varietal Character); ratings are QPR (Quality-to-Price Ratio). Prices
are LCBO retail. Only my top rated wines are here. NOTE: The LCBO does
NOT put out all of the wines of the release for wine writers or product
consultants. Corked wines are not normally available for a re-tasting.
 

======>>>> ** BEST WINE VALUE OF THE RELEASE *UNDER* $20
 
Ruhlmann Vieilles Vignes Gewurztraminer 2011 Alsace, +982082, $19.95:
complex concentration, another heavy in the current LCBO gewurztraminer 
sweepstakes in the under $20 market (third in a row). 13% ABV, Gold
Medalist. QPR: 93.
 
======>>>> ** BEST WINE VALUE OF THE RELEASE *OVER* $20
 
Domaine de Viaud 2001 Lalande de Pomerol, +282475, $28.95
 
TOP VALUE WHITE WINES under $20 or so.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1. Santa Carolina Gran Reserva Chardonnay 2010 Casablanca Valley,
+928580, $14.95: terrific value, concentrated French oak and toast
tones, almost 4 years old now, aged nicely, 14.5% ABV. QPR: 90.
2. Chateau Moncontour Demi-Sec Vouvray 2011, +16709, $17.95: off-dry
chenin blanc as it should be, 11.5% ABV, smokey, elegant with some
rancio and bitterness, twist top. Perfect as an aperitif wine. QPR: 89.
3. Pierre Luneau-Papin Clos des Allees Vieilles Vignes Muscadet Sevre
et Maine Sur Lie 2012, +357327, $18.95: normally light and crisp, but
here with some substance due to the vieilles vignes. Complex if you
ruminate on it. QPR: 89.
4. Ocone Giano Greco 2011 DOP Taburno Sannio Campania, +354449, $18.95:
another rare find from Italy, a bit jammy in the marmalade-peach area,
but mysterious enough in its complexity to reward thinking about it.
12.5% ABV. QPR: 89.
 
TOP VALUE RED WINES under $20 or so.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1. Montes Limited Selection Pinot Noir 2011 Casablanca, +274159,
$14.95: another full value wine packed with concentration in the old
style of Burgundy, cherry fruit, toast, and more dark fruit. 14% ABV,
twist top. QPR: 90.
2. Vina Tarapaca Gran Reserva Carmenere 2011 Maipo, +57513, $17.95:
some weediness puts it more into the Euro mode, but concentrated
flavours abound. 14% ABV. QPR: 89.
3. Domaine Lafage Cuvee Nicolas Vieilles Vignes Grenache Noir 2010 IGP
Cotes Catalanes, +354191, $18.95: welcome to vieilles vignes month at
the LCBO. More concentrated and delicious flavours of the grenache
kind, minus the usual papery flavour. 14.5% ABV. QPR: 89.
4. A. Poderi Jerzu Chuerra Riserva Cannonau di Sardegna 2008, +270272,
$16.95: Italianate nose and entry, dense and chunky flavours, still
tight so you'll need to lay it down a bit (maybe two years?), great
price, 13.5% ABV. QPR: 89.
 
VALUE: "RESTAURANT READY" or "BRING YOUR OWN WINE BOTTLE" over $20
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Restaurants should consider offering these FINE VALUE wines at a $10
markup over retail; the wines are READY to enjoy right NOW. Consumers
should buy these wines to bring to restaurants with corkage programs.
 
1. Stratus White 2010 VQA NOTL, +660704, $44.20 retail.
2. Hauller Muenchberg Riesling 2011 Alsace Grand Cru, +360370, $21.95.
3. Domaine Rijckaert Puligny-Montrachet Les Champgains 1er Cru 2010,
+355909, $69.95
4. Bachelder Lowrey Vineyard Pinot Noir 2011 VQA St. David's Bench
Niagara, +361816, $44.95.
5. Daniel Lenko Old Vines Merlot 2010 VQA Niagara, +75622, $34.95.
6. Versado Malbec 2012 Lujan de Cuyo Mendoza, +317008, $25.95.
7. Vergenoegd Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 WO Stellenbosch, +68445, $24.95.
8. Domaine Cros de Romet Cairanne Cotes du Rhone-Villages 2011, +42986,
$23.95.
9. Giacosa Fratelli Vigna Mandorlo Barolo 2006, +352088, $49.95
10. Ricasoli Brolio Chianti Classico 2010, +3962, $23.95
11. La Rioja Alta Vina Ardanza Reserva Especial 2004 Rioja, +315531,
$38.95.
12. Urbina Gran Reserva Especial 1994 Rioja, +355743, $46.95.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

OTHER FOOD AND DRINK BOOKS

IDIOTS' GUIDES WINE (Alpha, 2013, 262 pages, ISBN 978-1-61564-416-
2, $19.95 US paper covers) is by Stacy Slinkard, sommelier and wine
editor of About.com, and wine educator. What distinguishes Idiot Guides
from all the other such introductory tools is the use of colour and
clay-based paper. So: if a picture is worth a thousand words, then this
is the basic wine guide for you. It is loaded with maps, labels,
vineyards, and the like. But in essence, it gives the bare bones of
wine varieties (the top 8) and vintages, Old world vs. New world, tips
for matching/pairing wines with food, and how to find wines that you
will enjoy. For us here in Canada, the section on local wines is
laughable (three pages, frozen vineyards and grapes, three producers –
even Virginia gets four producers). But hey – it is all so simple that
it can be memorized for your next dinner/patio party.
Audience and level of use: beginner
Some interesting or unusual facts: "Situated on opposite sides of
Canada, British Columbia and Ontario are…" Really?
The downside to this book: "The coveted juice is bottled in half-
bottles" – I think the grape juice used in ice wine has to be fermented
first.
The upside to this book: lots of pictures.
Quality/Price Rating: 79.
 
 
 
4. BULLETS AND BREAD; the World War II story of feeding Americans at
home and on the battlefield (History Publishing Co., 2013, 330 pages,
ISBN 978-1-933909-75-2, $28.95 US hard covers) is by Kent Whitaker, a
food writer and book author who also specializes in the history of food
and nutrition in American conflicts such as the Civil War and WWII.
Here he delves into food during 1941-1945, concentrating on "chow" –
the military cooks and what was provided by the government, plus what
citizens at home ate during rationing. There are chapters on canned
chow, both Allied and Axis rations, training for cooks, chow on trucks-
planes-boast-battleships, food for the invasions in Italy and France,
Victory Gardens and home rationing. As he says, he examines the food
supply chain and the transformation of the food industry needed to feed
a military that grew from one million to ten million over night.
There's a large chapter on "memories", a sort of oral history or
reprints of remembrances, with many photos and illustrations. This is
followed by some recipes, based on pamphlets and cooking manuals of the
time. It is a bit of a hodge-podge, but it is cohesively laid out with
readable typefaces. He ends with a huge list of military museums and
their libraries that he visited, along with websites.
Audience and level of use: military historians, culinary historians,
reference libraries.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: army cakes (hot cakes),
ration muffins, vegetable omelet, dishes with SPAM, SOS for the home,
kale and rice ring, meatless bean recipes.
The downside to this book: some of the writing style in the first part
is a bit turgid, but the overall impressions can be savoured and the
points get across.
The upside to this book: lots of adverts, photos, reproductions (all
black and white).
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 

5. EATS; enjoy all the seconds (Advantage, 2013, 252 pages, ISBN 978-1-
59932-386-2, $29.99 CAN paper covers) is by Mary Rolph Lamontagne, who
went to cooking school in Paris and then returned to Montreal to work
as a food writer for the French Canadian magazine Recevoir. Since 2005
she's been a food consultant and teacher in South Africa. Here she 
concentrates on leftovers (she has had to be frugal with food in the
South African game lodges). She makes suggestions for using up
leftovers or excess from a garden or farmer's market. I know myself
that I suffer from overzealous shopping, so the book will prove
invaluable for still more ideas. Indeed, I've now gone beyond leftovers
and seconds. To me, my problem is what I call "holdovers", third
helpings of the same food. Personally, I can reduce everything to a
sauce or to a stuffing. She's prepared fruit and veggies in master
recipes which can then be re-invented into three or four other
components. There are 135 preps for 12 fruits and 15 veggies, which she
has divided by colour: the greens, the purples, the reds, the yellows,
and the whites. Preparations have their ingredients listed in
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.
For more ideas, visit savourandsave.com.
Audience and level of use: home cooks
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: for red cabbage, there is
red cabbage salad, cabbage and apple soup shooters, sweet-and-sour red
cabbage, Asian chicken salad, and fish tacos with cumin-scented
cucumber and cabbage slaw.
The downside to this book: I wanted more recipes.
The upside to this book: there are multiple indexes, by course, dish,
and ingredient.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 
 
 
6. KEEPERS (Rodale, 2013, 240 pages, ISBN 978-1-60961-354-9, $26.99 US
hard covers) is by Kathy Brennan and Carolina Campion, who have both
won culinary awards and worked for Saveur, among other magazines. The
subtitle says it all: "two home cooks share their tried-and-true
weeknight recipes and the secrets to happiness in the kitchen". Well,
they may be home cooks, but they have a terrific amount of experience,
more than you or I. There is also some heavy duty logrolling from
people such as Daniel Boulud. It is a folksy book, mainly for families
during the week, the key to which is, of course, ORGANIZING. The preps
are mains and sides, with a selection of sauces and dressings. There
are recipe indexes by category (extra-fast, popular with kids,
vegetarian, etc.) and by ingredient. There are also lots of tips
throughout the book. Preparations have their ingredients listed in
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.
Audience and level of use: homemakers
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: black bean and butternut
squash enchiladas, Asian pork sliders, Japanese style meat and
potatoes, "jump-in-the-mouth" turkey cutlets, adobe-style chicken
wings.
The downside to this book: maybe a little too much emphasis on
lifestyle in yet another family cook book?
The upside to this book: lots of leading and a large typeface.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
 
 
 
7. FISH; 54 seafood feasts (Chronicle Books, 2013, 228 pages, ISBN 978-
1-4521-0948-0, $27.50 US hard covers) is by Cree LeFavour, a cookbook
writer and author of Poulet. Here she looks at shellfish, fillets, and
crustaceans, organized into 54 set meals. It is arranged by
international region: American, European, Latin, East Asian, South
Asian, and Middle Eastern/African. LaFavour has chosen fish that are
sustainable, abundant, and flavourful. She has a long list of what to
avoid and what to buy – there is still plenty of choice out there at
the market, but one is limited sometimes by a restaurant menu.
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no separate table of
equivalents.
Audience and level of use: fish lovers, and those wishing to know more
about sustainability.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: braised squid, prawn-studded
Persian rice, grilled shrimp kebabs, kimchi oyster dogs, Ramen noodle
bowl, wok-braised haddock, yellowfin tuna sliders, panfried lime-
chipotle tilapia, Kauai ahi poke.
The downside to this book: my eyes got fatigued looking at the
typewriter-style typeface, which is the same (Courier) as I have looked
at for the past 50 years.
The upside to this book: my fave picture is the last one in the book.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 
 
 
8. CARAMEL (Gibbs Smith, 2013, 224 pages, ISBN 978-1-4236-3212-2,
$24.99 US hard covers) is by Carole Bloom, who has written ten other
books about chocolate, desserts, pastries, candy, and even some for the
Dummy series. Here the emphasis is on the brown side of food, including
caramelizing: cakes, cupcakes, brownies, tarts, pie, cookies, custards,
mousses, parfaits, ice cream, candies, just about everything imaginable
that can be browned. Preparations have their ingredients listed in
avoirdupois measurements for both volume and weight. There are also
tables of metric equivalents. Introductory notes cover caramel,
butterscotch, toffee, and brittle. There is a sources list, but mainly
for equipment.
Audience and level of use: pastry cooks, caramel lovers.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: dulce de leche sandwich
cookies, hazelnut praline biscotti, caramelized upside down pear tart,
caramel pecan cake squares, caramel buttercream frosting, chocolate
dulce de leche pecan pie.
The downside to this book: no gluten-free flours are used.
The upside to this book: excellent photography of sweets.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 

9. SLOW COOKING FOR TWO; basics, techniques, recipes (Gibbs Smith,
2013, 160 pages, ISBN 978-1-4236-3383-9, $19.99 US hard covers) is by
Cynthia Gaubert, co-author with Nathalie Dupree of Mastering the Art of
Southern Cooking (2013 Beard winner) and Southern Biscuits. Here she
deals with a busy two-person household who need a low maintenance food
pattern. All the preps were done in a Cuisinart brand slow cooker; it
uses the same amount of electricity as a 75 watt bulb. What's different
about this book is the concept of Double Dinners. Most cuts of beef and
chicken are sold in packages designed to serve four or more people. Her
Double Dinner recipes call for using slow cooker liners as separate
cooking bags to cook TWO entirely different recipes in the same
implement at the same time, using the total supermarket package. For
example, the smallest chuck roast at her store is two pounds. She cuts
it in half and makes two entirely different meals with liners,
following two separate recipes. One gets eaten now, the other tomorrow
or whenever (it will not be a leftover). She has also developed a slow
cooker pantry: refrigerator, freezer and dry. All courses are
presented. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois
measurements, but there is a table of metric equivalents.
Audience and level of use: slow cooker appliance owners.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Cornish hen in port wine and
fig preserves, bulgur pilaf, potato gratin, kale and kielbasa soup,
banana bread, ginger peach butter,
The downside to this book: there is enough white space to allow for a
casserole version of many dishes, for those without slow cookers.
The upside to this book: Double Dinner idea.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
 
 
 
10. HOME BREW BEER (DK Publishing, 2013, 224 pages, ISBN 978-1-4654-
0983-6, $22 US hard covers) is by Greg Hughes, co-owner of BrewUK, an
online brewing website. He also organizes beer competitions. It is a
fun book – anyone can make their own beer, from a simple kit or from an
elaborate setup with friends. There are 100 recipes here from around
the world, in different styles, with colour photos of techniques and
the finished beers. The range includes lagers and ales, wheat beers,
herb-spice-fruit beers, all with different levels of strength and
concentration of flavours. I used to make beer for 20 years, but had to
switch to ciders for my weight problems. So it is a treat to revisit a
basic home brew book. There is the usual DK treatment of pictures and
graphs illustrating timelines, geography, ingredients and techniques.
There are many complications involving yeast treatment, hops, adjuncts,
and even waters. A simple recipe is all you need to get started – the
rest are for the big boys' club, which you can join after experience.
The first rule is to never, ever use sucrose (table sugar) because the
resulting brew will taste too apple-y. Of course, you may like that
style, so do go ahead – it's a shandygaff. Equipment can be basic or
extensive, but will always involve transfer hoses, air locks, and
carboys. More than a third of the book covers all this material. The
recipes are the remainder. Preparations have their ingredients listed
in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is also a table
of metric equivalents. He has a glossary, a trouble-shooting FAQ, and
some online forums for further help and assistance and recipes.
Audience and level of use: potential home brewers, even experienced
ones looking for something different.
Some interesting or unusual facts: Beer is unlikely to make you sick as
the alcohol will kill off the bacteria. Damage from exploding bottles
is mostly a thing of the past if you follow directions exactly and use
plastic bottles.
The downside to this book: some preps look too complicated but really,
they are not.
The upside to this book: good fun.
Quality/Price Rating: 90.
 
 
 
11. BAKING BY HAND; make the best artisanal breads and pastries better
without a mixer (Page Street Publishing, 2013; distr. Canadian Manda
Group, 240 pages, ISBN 978-1-62414-000-6, $22.99 US paper covers) is by
Andy and Jackie King, founders of A & J King Artisan Bakers in Salem,
MA. It's also got lots of log rolling, from Jeffrey Hamelman and Nina
Simmonds. The Kings advocate mixing by hand, which usually takes place
after most of the products have been incorporated. Here, it happens at
the beginning. They develop their own sourdough culture, and then shape
the bread for the oven. It's a good method, led by the Four-Fold
technique for making bread at home. There are lots of detail about the
bakery, as well as pix of techniques. The preps come from their bakery,
and include a ciabatta, a multigrain, some pastries, and of course the
sourdough. There are chapters on breads and flatbreads, sandwiches and
fillings, croissants and sticky buns, some sweet and savoury tarts, and
even bread puddings. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both
metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of
equivalents. Most preps are also scaled, so that ingredients have to be
weighed.
Audience and level of use: home bakers.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: English muffin toasting
bread; caraway-rye sourdough; oatmeal-cinnamon-raisin loaves; brown ale
and barley bread; caramel-bourbon-pecan bread pudding.
The downside to this book: no gluten-free adaptations.
The upside to this book: great binding makes the book lie flat with no
effort.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 

12. STARTERS & SIDES MADE EASY; favorite triple-tested recipes
(Artscroll/Shaar Press, 2013, 128 pages, ISBN 978-1-4226-1422-8, $15.99
US) is by Leah Schapira and Victoria Dwek, both of them food writers
specializing in kosher cuisine. This is just one of the "Made Easy"
series for the kosher home (others deal with fresh food and Passover).
There are 60 preps here that are supposed to jazz up any meal, kosher
or not. Check out more at cookkosher.com. There's a spice guide,
followed by a fundamentals section of mashed food, roasted veggies, and
rice as a platform. And then a section on plating. The recipes come
next, followed by a chapter on how to make a side or starter into a
main. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois
measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.
Audience and level of use: kosher kitchens
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: za'atar and rosemary baked
olives; braised steak kebabs with apricots; black rice with mango and
peaches; falafel cigars; sweet potato and leek quiche.
The downside to this book: I'd like more recipes.
The upside to this book: good photography.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
 
 
 
13. STEP-BY-STEP CAKE DECORATING (DK Books, 2013, 256 pages, ISBN 978-
1-4654-1441-0, $25 US hard covers) is by Karen Sullivan, a custom cake
maker with a successful celebration cake business. She's assisted by
three professional cake decorators (Asma Hassan, Sandra Monger, and
Amelia Nutting). Together, they present hundreds of ideas, techniques,
and projects for creative designs. Step-by-step techniques go over
icings, coverings, piping, embossing, modeling, and airbrushing. You
could make a filigree-piped wedding cake with tumbling roses, or a
pirate ship cake with cake pops, or even a simple g=handbag. There are
more than 100 step-by-step techniques illustrated here, along with cake
basics and templates. There are also resources list and tables on
adapting cake quantities. Decorating techniques include 3-D,
stenciling, and imaging. Preparations have their ingredients listed in
avoirdupois measurements with some metric, but there is no table of
metric equivalents.
Audience and level of use: home bakers, intermediate level of skill.
Quality/Price Rating: 88.
 

14. RAW, QUICK & DELCIIOUS! 5-ingredient recipes in just 15 minutes
(Robert Rose, 2013, 221 pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0455-0, $24.95 US paper
covers) is by Douglas McNish, a vegan executive chef who has also
written "Eat Raw, Eat Well". Here he continues to promote the vegan
life style with more raw dishes. This time, he's limiting himself to
five ingredients in each and prepared in 15 minutes or so. There are
175 preps here, and they do not deal with dehydrators or sprouting. All
meals are covered, from Breakfast's smoothies, drinks and juices,
through Snacks, Salads, Dressings, Mains, Pasta and noodles, Sides and
Desserts. There is some material on techniques and maintaining a raw
pantry of 15 items. And there are lots of variations for many recipes.
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: vegans, vegetarians, raw food lovers.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: date muesli; mushroom tart;
stuffed cucumber cups; carrot pad Thai; mango ginger cilantro dressing;
strawberry cheesecake smoothie.
The upside to this book: Good layout, good typeface
Quality/Price Rating: 88.
 

15. THE COMPLETE LEAFY GREENS COOKBOOK; 67 leafy greens & 250 recipes
(Robert Rose, 2013, 480 pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0457-4, $27.95 CAN soft
covers) is another good value book from award-winning cookbook author-
journalist Susan Sampson via Robert Rose publishers. Since Nana said
you should eat your greens, then this is the book to begin with: 67
greens include the well-known plus sorrel, grape leaves, perilla,
turnip greens, and more. While the arrangement is dictionary-style, she
does have columns of data about four sub-groupings: salad greens,
cabbages, leaves and vines, and wild greens (chickweed, dandelion
greens, fiddleheads, purslane, ramps, watercress, et al.). Each green
gets a description embodying ID names, foreign names, tasting notes,
equivalents (bunches, weights, leaves, stems), health notes, varieties,
how to buy and store, prepping, and substituting. Then follow a few
recipes for each green, in which she notes whether the prep is vegan or
where it goes in the menu (side, salad). Of course, there is a colour
illustration of what the plant looks like. Beverages and health drinks
are covered too (check the index under "B" for beverage). Preparations
have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois
measurements, but there is no table of equivalents. For more, look at
www.thefarelady.com.
Audience and level of use: vegetarians, reference libraries, plant
eaters.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: for sorrel, she's got creamy
sorrel soup, fattoush, garlic lover's beans and greens soup, and sorrel
pesto.
The downside to this book: the book is weighty because of the need for
colour.
The upside to this book: a good collection.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.