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Monday, June 9, 2014

The Event: Montefalco Sagrantino: Umbria's Jewel, wine tasting in Toronto June

The Date and Time: Wednesday June 4, 2014   noon to 4 Pm
The Event: Montefalco Sagrantino: Umbria's Jewel wine tasting
The Venue: Gardiner Museum
The Target Audience: members of the Wine Writers' Circle of Canada for the first hour
The Availability/Catalogue: there were six wineries, three had agents. Each winery showed a Ross and a Sagrantino. Some had other wines as well (see below).
The Quote/Background: Sagrantino wines are noted for their heavy but polished tannins. The event was sponsored by the Italian Chamber of Commerce (Ontario) and Consorzio Tutela Vini Montefalco, a 53 member group.
The Wines:
 
**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Colle Ciocco Montefalco Sagrantino 2007 Umbria
-Fattoria Colsanto Montefalco Sagrantino 2008 Umbria
-Perticaia Montefalco Sagrantino 2009 Umbria
-Scacciadiavoli Montefalco Sagrantino 2007 Umbria – Vintages $36.95
-Arnaldo Caprai Montefalco Sagrantino Collepiano 2008 Umbria
-Antonelli San Marco Montefalco Sagrantino 2007 Umbria
 
***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (88 – 90 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Colle Ciocco Montefalco Clargnamo Bianco Umbria 2013
-Colle Ciocco Montefalco Sagrantino Passito 2007 Umbria
-Fattoria Colsanto Montefalco Rosso 2010 Umbria
-Perticaia Montefalco Rosso Riserva 2009 Umbria
-Scacciadiavoli Montefalco Rosso 2009 Umbria – Vintages $19.95
-Arnaldo Caprai Montefalco Rosso 2010 Umbria
-Antonelli San Marco Montefalco Rosso 20010 Umbria
 
*** GOOD -- Three Stars (85 – 87 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
--Colle Ciocco La Cantina Montefalco Rosso 2009 Umbria
 
The Food: international cheeses, crackers, breads, veggies and dips.
The Downside: it was too good a summery day to stay indoors, but a job is a job...
The Upside: great event space, with room, and a select group of wines to allow for more time.
The Contact Person: tinelli@italchambers.ca
The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 89.

Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Sunday, June 8, 2014

The Event: Toronto Hunt presents an Evening in Argentina, with Rutini wines.

The Date and Time: Wednesday, May 7, 2014  6Pm to 10PM
The Event: Toronto Hunt presents an Evening in Argentina, with Rutini wines.
The Venue: Toronto Hunt
The Target Audience: members and their guests, invited media.
The Availability/Catalogue: all wines are available through the agency, The Case for Wine.
The Quote/Background: there were a few dances by Tango Soul performers Bryant Lopez and Faye Lavin that scored very highly with the audience. Chef Natalia Machado, from Buenos Aires, is currently executive chef at L'Atelier d'Argentina in Montreal. She did the meals for here and for another club in Hamilton on the weekend – all in celebration of Argentine food and Rutini Argentine wines.
The Wines: We had a reception wine (Trumpeter Sauvignon Blanc 2013) plus four other wines with the meal. Wines are available for purchase through www.thecaseforwine.com
 
**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Cruz Alta Gran Reserva Chardonnay 2012, $21 13.8% ABV
 
***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (88 – 90 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Trumpeter Sauvignon Blanc 2013, $20  13.5%
-Cruz Alta Gran Reserva Malbec 2011, $21 14.2%
-Cruz Alta Chairman's Blend 2011, $24 13.5%
-Rutini Encuentro Barrel Blend 2009, $39 14.5%
 
The Food: Here's the menu -
Reception – empanaditas de mar, with Trumpeter Sauvignon Blanc 2013 (balanced flavours)
First course – mini crab cakes, grilled lemon and fennel, with Cruz Alta GR Chardonnay (ripe and full, lots of engaging French oak).
Second course – smoked lamb chop, paprika, sweet corn, fava beans, with Cruz Alta GR Malbec (juicy and succulent)
Third course – seared rib eye steak with Brussels sprouts, bacon, spiced polenta, with Cruz Alta Chairman's Blend (mostly malbec, a big wine) and Encuentro Barrel Blend (bordeaux-styled blend with 40% malbec, all new French oak – mounds of flavours).
Fourth course – ricotta and lemon cream almond crumble
Coffees
The Downside: why the dessert? There was no sweetie with it, and we could have had some cheeses for the wines. Just wondering.
The Upside: a chance to uncover Chef Natalia's cooking, beyond her appearances on Chopped TV show.
The Contact Person: elayne@thecaseforwine.com
The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 87.

Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Friday, June 6, 2014

Schuchmann Wines Georgia Tsinandali 2013 - review

Schuchmann Wines Georgia Tsinandali 2013 Georgia (AMZ-Whiz Trading), about $16.95: Tsinandali is a wine region in Georgia; it is the home of Rkatsiteli (possibly once the world's most
widely planted white wine grape variety) and Mtsvane, both white wines that are used in this blend. The former, also made into wine in New York's Finger Lakes, is highly acidic,
lending citric and apple tones. The latter is fairly fruity and aromatic. The blend is complementary: the green attack of the Rkatsiteli seems to be perfectly balanced by the
orange stone fruit (peaches, apricots) of the Mtsvane. The upfront fruit and flowers on the nose and entry is mellowed by the stoney character on the mid-palate, and it finishes
refreshingly citrus. A pretty good sipper and even better with seafood as a first course. This particular wine has a pale clear colour emphasizing its fresh nature; it is only
six months old, from the 2013 vintage. It should be served chilled. It reminds me of a new style Ontario Vidal or a Vermentino from Italy. 13% ABV, with a cork closure. Stainless fermentation and storage at the winery, which is a tourist destination with name recognition; it appears to be worth a visit. Quality/Price rating is 89 points by Dean Tudor of Gothic Epicures.

Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

WORLD WINE WATCH (LCBO VINTAGES TIP SHEET) FOR JUNE 7, 2014

WORLD WINE WATCH (LCBO VINTAGES TIP SHEET) FOR  JUNE 7, 2014
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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 LCBO 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
 
Lanzerac Chardonnay 2011 WO Stellenbosch, +971929, $16.95: yummy BF chardonnay with 11 months French oak BA, cork finish, 14% ABV. Butterscotch and wood tones, naturally. QPT: 91+.
 
====?>>> ** BEST WINE VALUE OF THE RELEASE *OVER* $20
 
Chateau Roc St-Michel 2009 Saint-Emilion Grand Cru Classe, +366639, $28.95
 
 
TOP VALUE WHITE WINES under $20 or so.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1.Torino Estate Don David Reserve Torrontes 2012 Cafayate, +727677, $13.95: good depth and long finish, 14% ABV, firm and fruity, the wine of Toronto! Gold Medalist, cork finish. QPR: 89.
2.Nugan King Valley Frasca's Lane Chardonnay 2012 Victoria, +288191, $19.95: personable wooded chardonnay for those who like concentrated flavours. Twist top. QPR: 89.
3.Pierre Lieubeau La Grille Single Estate Muscadet 2012, +377051, $15.95: good bracing acidity, try with oysters. 12% ABV, twist top. From a delimited area. QPR: 89.
4.E. Guigal Cotes du Rhone Blanc 2012, +290296, $18.95: people have lined up for this modestly-priced wine. 13.5%, cork finish, good value. 65% viognier, lotsa peaches and flowers, and succulence. QPR: 89.
5.La Cappuccina Soave 2013, +81489, $15.95: while some have said "you don't go to Italy for white wine", this one is surprisingly fresh with melons and citric tones. First course wine. 12% ABV, cork finish. QPR: 89.
 
TOP VALUE RED WINES under $20 or so.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1.Creekside Laura's Red 2010 VQA Niagara, +117960, $19.95: over the years, people have beaten a path to Creekside for this wine: a cab sauv/merlot/syrah/malbec blend. It is over-the-top dense, with concentrated jammy black fruit, mocha and toast (hmmm, sounds like breakfast). Twist top, 13.5% ABV. QPR: 90.
2.Palo Alto Winemaker's Selection 2010 Maule, +376236, $18.95: this tight tasting Chilean expression of wine is a good price for something to lay down a bit. Components are shiraz/cabsauv/carmenere/merlot/petite sirah, wrapped in 14.5% ABV with a cork finish. Good price. QPR: 89.
3.Chapoutier Domaine Tournon Mathilda Shiraz 2011 Victoria, +327395, $19.95: very syrah-like, Northern Rhone-ish, 13% ABV, and value-driven. Twist top. QPR: 90.
4.The Winner's Tank Shiraz 2012 Langhorne Creek, +374348, $17.95: another very intense syrah wine with MVC flavours of black fruit and spices. 14.8% ABV, twist top. QPR: 89.
5.Zonte's Footstep Lake Doctor Shiraz 2012 Langhorne Creek, +72975, $16.95: highly acclaimed medal winner, affordable value, some viognier added (small print on back label), twist top, 14.5% ABV. Ripe, rich, red juiciness. QPR: 89.
6.Boyer Domergue Carignanissime de Centeilles 2010 Minervois, +41913, $18.95: concentrated garrigue on the nose and palate, resolving on finish with toast. Very good wine with length, substance for sipping. 14.5% ABV. QPR: 89.
7.Feudi San Pio Valpolicella Classico Ripasso Superiore 2012, +181446, $17.95: the LCBO "ripasso of the month". QPR: 89.
8.Maria Manuela Quinta do Roncao Reserva 2011 Douro, +147942, $15.95: with soft and fruity tones, this high performance wine has strong North American appeal. Made from the Port grapes of T.franca, T.roriz and T.nacional, 14% ABV. QPR: 89.
9.Breca Old Vines Garnacha 2010 Catalayud, +329086, $19.95: vines are almost 90 years old. The LCBO "garnacha of the month". 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.Loveblock Sauvignon Blanc 2012 Marlborough, +366310, $29.95 retail.
2.Domaine Chenevieres Chablis 2012, +365031, $22.95.
3.Terredora di Paola Loggia della Serra Greco di Tufo 2012, +983197, $20.95.
4.Thirty Bench Red 2011 VQA Beamsville Bench, +320986, $24.
5.I Latina Syrah 2010 Cachapoal Valley Chile, +371120, $22.95.
6.Domaine Terlato & Chapoutier Lieu di Malakoff Shiraz 2011 Pyrennes Victoria, +290874,$55.95.
7.Grant Burge The Holy Trinity Grenache/Shiraz/Mourvedre 2010 Barossa, +236257, $29.95.
8.Wynns Coonawarra Estate Black Label Cabernet Sauvignon 2010, +84996, $27.95.
 

Chimo! www.deantudor.com

The Event: Annual Toronto Portfolio tasting of Tawse wines

The Date and Time: Monday, May 5, 2014  3Pm to 7PM
The Event: Annual Toronto Portfolio tasting of Tawse wines
The Venue: Spoke Club
The Target Audience: wine trade and media
The Availability/Catalogue: all wines are in stock
The Quote/Background: the tasting was just ahead of a dinner showcasing the various wines.
The Wines: I did not try every wine. Prices are licensee.
 
**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Tawse Limestone Ridge Spark Riesling 2012, $16.84
-Tawse Riesling Carly's Block 2012, $26.97
-Tawse Pinot Noir Lauritizen Vineyard 2010, $37.95
-Tawse Cabernet Franc Van Bers Vineyard 2009, $42.17
-Tawse Meritage 2010, $50.61
 
***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (88 – 90 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Tawse Spark [blend] 2011 sparkling, $21.06 [chard & riesling]
-Tawse Riesling Limestone Ridge 2012, $26.97
-Tawse Chardonnay Quarry Road 2011, $30.35 [organic]
-Tawse Chardonnay Robyn's Block 2011, $38.79 [organic]
-Tawse Cabernet Merlot 2011, $17.69
-Tawse Pinot Noir Grower's Blend, $22.75
-Tawse Merlot David's Block 2010, $42.17 [organic]
 
*** GOOD -- Three Stars (85 – 87 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Tawse Gewurztraminer Frost Vineyard 2012, $16.84
-Tawse Chardonnay 2011, $21.06
-Tawse Pinot Noir Quarry Road Vineyard 2010, $29.51 [organic]
-Tawse Cabernet Franc Grower's Blend 2011, $22.75
 
The Food: charcuterie, sausages, cheese, biscuits, nuts.
The Downside: My palate had just come from another portfolio tasting.
The Upside: a chance to taste two dozen Tawse wines in Toronto
The Contact Person: d.lafleur@tawsewinery.ca
The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 87.
 
Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Tasting of wines from the South Coast portion of Lake Erie (Ontario South Coast Wineries and Growers Association and WCO)

The Date and Time: Tuesday, May 27, 2014  8AM to 6PM
The Event: A tasting of wines from the South Coast portion of Lake Erie, centered around Port Dover, sponsored by Ontario South Coast Wineries and Growers Association and Wine Country Ontario plus local suppliers.
The Venue: Aboard the Kayloe
The Target Audience: select wine media from Toronto and Niagara
The Availability/Catalogue: wines are at the winery, most are for sale or will be soon (we tasted some tank samples).
The Quote/Background: There were welcoming words from Mike McArthur, President of OSCWGA, Magdalena Kaiser-Smit from OWC, Doug Beatty from Burning Kiln, and the Mayor of Port Dover (thankfully, not yet in re-election speechifying mode). Judy Buck, the administrator of the Ontario South Coast Wineries and Growers Association, said: "Magdalena Kaiser-Smit was a huge help, we appreciated her advice and the funding from WCO. We also want to thank our other sponsors who helped us, Ontario Southwest Tourism, Norfolk County, and the County of Haldimand. In addition to this each winery also contributed financially, as well as Doug Beatty from Burning Kiln Winery. Here are some facts about our area:
* We have 11 wineries in total (2 in Elgin, 1 Haldimand, 8 in Norfolk)
of these 8 are open, the other 3 are in various stages of "opening" but all
are in production.)
* We are both grape and fruit wineries, with 3 wineries that are
exclusively fruit wine including ciders.
* We have about 130 acres of grapes, these are located in both Elgin
and Norfolk counties with the majority being in Norfolk counties."
 
The Wines:
 
**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Burning Kiln Stick Shaker Savagnin 2012, $24.95
-Burning Kiln Stick Shaker Savagnin 2013, $24.95
-Burning Kiln Kiln Hanger – The Sequel 2010, $59.95, also $119.95 magnum
-Wooden Bear Bear Claw Hard Cider, $3
-Dover Vineyards Smoke & Gamble Gewurztraminer Sussreserve 2011, $24.95
-Quai du Vin Red Signature Series 2012, $12.50
-Quai du Vin Chardonnay 2012, $13.50
-Burning Kiln Chardonnay 2013, $19.95
 
***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (88 – 90 in Quality/Price
Rating terms):
-Burning Kiln Kiln Hanger 2011, $50
-Burning Kiln Harvest Party Red 2013, $15.95
-Burning Kiln Harvest Party White 2013, $15.95
-Burning Kiln Horse & Boat Riesling 2013, $19.95
-Burning Kiln Cab Frank 2012, $24.95
-Burning Kiln Strip Room 2012, $24.95
-Burning Kiln Chenin Blanc 2010, $24.95 500 mL sweet
-Dover Vineyards Frisky Beaver White 2012, $13.95
-Dover Vineyards Smoke & Gamble Merlot Reserve 2011, $22.75
-Dover Vineyards Smoke & Gamble Cabernet Franc Apassimento 2012, $39.95
-Bonnieheath Estate Don't Count Your Chickens [frontenac gris]2013, $18
-Quai du Vin Merlot 2012, $16
-Quai du Vin Aurore-Muscat Petillants 2013, $12.50
-Blueberry Hill Estate Blueberry 2011, $14.95
 
*** GOOD -- Three Stars (85 – 87 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Burning Kiln Riesling 2013, $19.95
-Wooden Bear Gala, $14.95 [apple]
-Golden Leaf Pinot Noir 2012, $14.80
-Golden Leaf Merlot 2012
-Golden Leaf Chambourcin 2011, $18.20
-Golden Leaf Baco Noir 2011, $18.20
-Bonnieheath Estate Seyval Blanc 2012, $16-17
-Bonnieheath Estate Off-Dry White Blend 2013, $16-18
-Bonnieheath Estate Marquette 2012, $17-19
-Bonnieheath Estate Rose 2013,
-Villa Nova Estate Trout Fly Riesling 2012, $13.95
-Villa Nova Estate Pinot Noir 2012, $15.95  
-Villa Nova Estate Norfolk Red 2013, $11.95 
-Villa Nova Estate Mystery of HRIO 2013, $11.95 [new grapes from Vineland Station]
-Blueberry Hill Estate Vidal 2012
-Wooden Bear Marechal Foch 2011
 
The Food: Caterer Liz from F.W. Knechtel flipped her lid into the water, her chafing dish lid was blown away (by the wind)! As were we by the battered perch and pan-fried perch, the local lake-fish. Other great treats included local (Norfolk) asparagus with meaty bacon, shaved roast beef, antipasto skewers, local cheeses, French stick, focaccia, wild mushroom cheese log with local mushrooms, and a knockout dessert of rhubarb and strawbs from Urban Parisian. I accompanied my food with Quai du Vin Chardonnay and Wooden Bear Gala and Bear Claw Hard Cider. Good pairings they were with the perch!
The Downside: it was a long drive down and back, about 6 hours total.
The Upside: the cruise was great, the weather co-operated (thunderstorms were called for, but never appeared), and Transport Canada exempted us from the glassware restrictions.
The Contact Person: judy.buck@ontariosouthcoastwine.com
The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 88.
 
Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Friday, May 30, 2014

The Event: Portfolio tasting of 30.50 Imports.

The Date and Time: Monday, May 5, 2014  Noon to 4 Pm
The Event: Portfolio tasting of 30.50 Imports.
The Venue: Canoe
The Target Audience: wine trade, clients, media
The Availability/Catalogue: all wines are available through consignment or private order.
The Quote/Background: There were about 60 wines listed, including the rare Chateau Musar, Pearl Morissette from Ontario, and some dynamite sherries from Bodegas Tradicion.
The Wines: I did not try every wine. Prices are licensee.
 
**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Valle de Junco Lapa dos Gaivoes Eschola 2008, $25.95
-Sidonio de Sousa Garrafeira 2009, $39.95
-Belem's Madeira Wine Lda 10 Year Old Verdelho NV, $54.95
-Bodegas Tradicion 12 Year Old Fino NV, $55
-Bodegas Tradicion 30 Year Old Amontillado NV, $100
-Peter Zemmer Schiava Gentile 2013 DOC, $13.95
-Il Paradiso di Frassina Brunello di Montalcino 2008, $59.95
-Dom. Michel Mallard & Fils Aloxe-Corton 1er cru Les Valozieres 2009, $74.95
-Chateau Barrejat Seduction 2011 Madiran, $21.95
-Chateau Musar Red 2001, $59.95
 
***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (88 – 90 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Sidonio de Sousa Bairrada Tinto Reserva 2008, $20.95
-Porta da Teira Ninfa Rose 2013, $17.95
-Bodegas Amador Garcia Penagudo Blanco 2012 Viura, $13.95
-Bodegas Medrani Irazu Crianza 2010 Rioja, $17.95
-Bodegas Tradicion 20 Year Old Pedro Ximenez NV, $110
-Peter Zemmer Muller Thurgau 2013 DOC, $19.95
-Cantina di Venoso Aglianico del Vulture Vignali 2011, $15.957
-Castello di Verduno Barolo Massara 2006, $64.9577
-Fattoria Casabianca Chianti Colli Senesi Riserva 2010, $24.50
-Castello La Leccia Chianti Classico 2010, $24.95
-Castello La Leccia Chianti Classico Riserva Bruciagna 2009, $34.95
-Il Paradiso di Frassina Gea Sant'Antimo Rosso 2009, $49.95
-Musella Amarone della Valpolicella Riserva 2008, $65.95
-Pearl Morissette Chardonnay Cuvee 19th Street 2010 VQA, $29.50
-Pearl Morissette Chardonnay Cuvee 19th Street 2011 VQA, $29.50
-Pearl Morissette Cabernet Franc 2011 VQA, $32.08
-Dom. Michel Mallard & Fils Ladoix Le Clos Royer 2010, $49.95
-Chapuy Carte Verte Brut Grand Cru Blanc de Blancs Champagne, $49.95 [half-bottles are only half the price, $24.95]
-Chateau Barrejat Cuvee des Vieux Ceps 2010 Madiran, $24.95 [old vines]
-Chateau Musar Hochar Pere et Fils Red 2008, $29.95
-Roots Run Deep Winery Educated Guess Chardonnay 2011 Napa, $23.95
 
*** GOOD -- Three Stars (85 – 87 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Porta da Teira Ninfa Branco Sauvignon Blanc-Fernnao Pires 2012, $17.95
-Bodegas Briego Reserva 2009 Ribera del Duero, $29.95
-Celler Cesca Vicent Red 2011 Priorat, $21.95
-Peter Zemmer Pinot Grigio La Lot IGT 2013, $13.95
-Castello di Verduno Barbaresco Rabaja 2008, $59.95
-Fattoria Casabianca Coppai Chianti Colli Senesi 2012, $12.95
-Chateau Musar Jeune Red 2011, $20.95
-Roots Run Deep Winery Educated Guess Cabernet Sauvignon 2011 Napa, $26.95
 
The Food: oysters, charcuterie, cheese, pates, quails eggs, breads.
The Downside: the controversial Pearl Morissette Riesling Cuvee Black Ball was missing.
The Upside: a chance to connect with some wine makers who were present.
The Contact Person: info@3050imports.com;
The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 90.
 
Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Thursday, May 29, 2014

World Chardonnay Day in Toronto: May 22, 2014

The Date and Time: Thursday, May 22, 2014 2Pm to 5PM

The Event: World Chardonnay Day

The Venue: Allen's (patio)

The Target Audience: wine trade

The Availability/Catalogue: domestic wines from the wineries, imports via agency licensee programmes.

The Quote/Background: this is a sort of preview of the Rebirth of Cool Climate Chardonnay – one world, one grape, one weekend (July 18-20, 2014). Tickets are available at coolchardonnay.org; the event is in Niagara. 55 winemakers will be present, as well as chefs and food.

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

-Southbrook Whimsy! "Damy" Chardonnay 2011 VQA Niagara biodynamic

-Speck Family Reserve Chardonnay 2010 VQA Niagara

-Jean Leon Vinya Gigi Chardonnay 2012 Spain

-Sumaridge Chardonnay 2011 South Africa [my fave]

-Creation Wine Estate Chardonnay 2012 South Africa

-Flat Rock Chardonnay Rusty Shed 2011 VQA Niagara

-13th Street Sandstone Vineyard Chardonnay 2010 VQA Niagara

-Cambria Chardonnay 2012 Katherine's Vineyard Santa Maria Valley California

-Murphy-Goode Chardonnay 2012 Santa Barbara

-Cave Spring CSV Chardonnay 2011 VQA Niagara

-Cave Spring Estate Chardonnay 2012 VQA Niagara

-Chateau des Charmes Chardonnay 2012 Paul Bosc Vineyard VQA Niagara

***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (88 – 90 in Quality/Price Rating terms):

-Trivento Golden Reserve Chardonnay 2012 Mendoza

-Concha y Toro Marques de Casa Concha Chardonnay 2012 Chile

-Laroche Chablis St. Martin [Chardonnay]

-Southbrook Triomphe Chardonnay Organic 2012 VQA Niagara

-Southbrook Poetica Chardonnay Biodynamic 2011 VQA Niagara

-Sperling Vineyards Estate Bottled Chardonnay 2012 VQA Okanagan

-Flat Rock Estate Chardonnay 2010 VQA Niagara

-Catena Chardonnay Mendoza

-Catena Alta Chardonnay Mendoza

-13th Street June's Vineyard Chardonnay 2012 VQA Niagara

-Torres Milmanda Chardonnay 2011 Spain

-Jean Leon 3055 Chardonnay 2013 Spain

-Torres Gran Vina Sol [Chardonnay] 2012 Spain

-Gerard Bertrand Domaine de l'Aigle Chardonnay 2011 Limoux

-Normal Hardie County Chardonnay 2012 VQA PEC

-Normal Hardie Niagara Chardonnay 2012 VQA Niagara

-Clos du Bois Calcaire Chardonnay 2011 California

-PlumpJack "Adaptation" Chardonnay 2011 California

-Malivoire Small Lot Chardonnay 2012 VQA Niagara

-Malivoire Mottiar Chardonnay 2011 VQA Niagara

-Bachelder Chardonnay 2011 VQA Niagara

-Bachelder Chardonnay 2012 VQA Niagara

*** GOOD -- Three Stars (85 – 87 in Quality/Price Rating terms):

-Grant Burge Summers Chardonnay 2012 Australia

-The Dreaming Tree Chardonnay 2012 California

-Robert Mondavi Private Selection Chardonnay 2010

-Robert Mondavi Chardonnay 2012

-Kim Crawford Unoaked Chardonnay 2013 New Zealand

-Flat Rock Chardonnay Unplugged 2012 VQA Niagara

-Malivoire Moira Vineyard Chardonnay 2010 VQA Niagara

-Chateau des Charmes Chardonnay Musque 2012 VQA Niagara


The Food: nothing for awhile, then crackers and finally some salmon canapes.

The Downside: for awhile, there was no list of wines. There were also additions and withdrawals, for "cool" also means "laid back".

The Upside: There were 21 domestic and 21 imported wines (mostly New World) poured

The Contact Person: trish@coolchardonnay.org

The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 87.

Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

BBQ, Grilling cookbooks galore !!

LOW & SLOW; the art and technique of braising, BBQ, and slow roasting (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014, 246 pages, ISNM 978-1-118-10591-7, $19.99 US hard covers) is by Robert Briggs (professor) and the Culinary Institute of America. The basic principles here concern low heat and slow cooking times for prepping tough but flavourful cuts of meat. It tells one how to make the most of every cut of meat, any time of the year. There are chapters on homemade rubs and sauces, plus some accompanying sides to prepare. It is arranged by the three techniques, and each chapter begins with a master recipe, with all the techniques fully illustrated and explained. Under braising, there are two recipes for each prep, one using a slow cooker, the other a stovetop or oven braise. Under BBQ, there are extensive notes on prepping and regional styles. The emphasis throughout is on international cuisine influences. It is a good thorough book, with plenty of techniques illustrated and good suggestions for sides. Just under 100 preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there are tables of metric equivalents.
Audience and level of use: beginning cooks, and men.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: braised pulled pork BBQ sandwiches; Korean-style braised short ribs; beef braised in beer and onions; braised oxtail; Moroccan chicken tagine; Eastern North Carolina BBQ pork butt; spit-roasted garlic and lime chicken.
The downside to this book: could have had more recipes.
The upside to this book: very compact.
Quality/Price Rating: 88.
 
 
8.SOUTHWEST DUTCH OVEN (Gibbs Smith, 2014, 128 pages, ISBN 978-1-4236-3635-9, $15.99 US spiral bound) is by George and Carolyn Dumler, both seasoned Dutch oven cooks preparing food for large crowds. They have qualified for the World Championships every year since 2009. Indeed, some of these preps here are reprinted from cookbooks of the 2010-2012 World Championship Cook-Off Dutch Oven Recipes. There's a primer, and then the book is arranged by course or ingredient such as chiles, sauces, sides, mains, breads, and desserts. There is also a menu for a big Southwestern Thanksgiving, with nine recipes. This must be the tenth book published this year on Dutch ovens: a really popular item?
Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is a table of metric equivalents.
Audience and level of use: Dutch oven users.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: mashed potatoes; turkey with chile garlic marinade; turkey breast with chipotle gravy; chorizo and pistachio stuffing; corn pudding; cheddar jalapeno twists; tequila cranberry compote; pumpkin pinon bread; and pecan chile pie.
The downside to this book: ripped out pages are easy (spiral binding)
The upside to this book: spiral bound, lies flat.
Quality/Price Rating: 86.
 
 
 
12.MARINADES; the quick-fix way to turn everyday food into exceptional fare, with 400 recipes (Harvard Common Press, 2014; dist. T.Allen, 320 pages, ISBN 978-1-55832-827-3, $17.95 US paper covers) is by Lucy Vaserfirer, recipe developer and cookbook author. This is a great idea for a book, as an alternative to a slow-cooker. With the right marinade, you can dress up meats or veggies in the morning, put the food in the fridge for the day, and finish off the plate at night with a broil, grill, microwave, or saute. Of course, for meat like beef, this only works on the softer textured cuts. The heavy duty stewing meats may be a tad too tough for quick cooking. The 200 marinades here are vinegar-based, oil-based, fruit-based, milk-based, and alcohol-based. There is certainly something for every day; each marinade comes with a recipe that shows one way to use it.  More than half the "suggested use" recipes are for grilled dishes and BBQs, but they can be adapted for indoor use. She opens with the marinades, in separate chapters for herbs, spices, citrus, tomato and the like. Then she moves on to different cuisines, such as southwestern marinades, South American marinades, European, Chines-Japanese-Korean, Southeast Asia, Indian, African, Caribbean, and even "sweet" dessert marinades.
Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.
Audience and level of use: those willing to experiment or looking for more jazzy flavours.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Buffalo wing marinade; balsamic-soy marinade; grilled portobellos; cranberry-cider marinade; teriyaki marinade.
The downside to this book: I just wish that there was something that can be done for the bully beef and the mutton, and other tough cuts of meat, that can happen within the 12 hour spread of AM and PM in the fridge.
The upside to this book: there are two indexes, one to the marinades and another to "suggested use".
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 
 
14.FIRE & SMOKE (Clarkson Potter, 2014, 256 pages, ISBN 978-0-7704-3438-0, $24.99 US soft covers) is by Chris Lilly, executive chef and partner of Big Bob Gibson Bar-B-Q. Their competition cooking team has won 10 World BBQ Championships, six other world titles, and other competitions. Lilly has also written Big Bob Gibson's BBQ Book. It is just one of many new BBQ books unleashed this season (see below for others), by competition champion celebrities and cookbook authors. Each, of course, has pitmaster secrets and also reflects as a Good Ol' Boy. Lilly combines the speed of grilling with smoky flavours of low-and-slow BBQ. No special equipment required: just the hot grill of smoldering coals and a rack or pan. There are 100 preps here, covering BBQ oysters, lamb ribs, grilled pizza, smoked pork belly confit, and cowboy ribeye. Sides, apps, salads, desserts, and cocktails are also here. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. Profusely illustrated. Quality/price rating: 87.
 
 
15.VIRGIL'S BARBECUE ROAD TRIP COOKBOOK; the best barbecue from around the country without ever leaving your backyard (St. Martin's Press, 2014, 335 pages, ISBN 978-1-250-04109-8, $29.99 US hard covers) is by Neal Corman, executive chef of Alicart Restaurant Group, with freelancer Chris Peterson as the focusing food writer. Virgil's has been doing BBQ since 1994 in New York City, with ideas from US BBQ country of Texas, North Carolina, Kansas City and Memphis.  Here there are preps for beef (Texas brisket, chicken fried steak, burnt ends), pork (baby ribs, pulled pork, slow ham), and chicken (pulled, fried, jerked). No lamb. It's arranged by course, from apps to desserts, with suggested menus (social gatherings, game day, afternoon grill fest, fish fry, Sunday brunch – 7 in all). There are also beer notes. These are recipes modified for home use from the restaurants which use 1400 pound smokers. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating: 88.
 
 
16.WILEY'S CHAMPIONSHIP BBQ (Gibbs Smith, 2014, 216 pages, ISBN 978-1-4236-3631-1, $19.99 US spiral bound) is by Wiley McCrary, a former Atlanta BBQ caterer, now a BBQ pitmaster champion and owner of Wiley's Championship BBQ restaurant in Savannah, Georgia. He's a co-author here with his wife Janet and Amy Paige Condon, associate editor of Savannah magazine and food writer (she's also co-authored The Back in the Day Bakery Cookbook). It is all done with the engaging subtitle "secrets that old men take to the grave". It is thorough and comprehensive, with pix of techniques. The spiral binding in a plus, for the recipes can lie flat on the counter or by the BBQ. There's the primer on smoking and BBQ, calculating, sauces (he also has a line he sells), and a section on how to use this cookbook, including getting a notebook for your own revisions. He's got a beef tri-tip, a smoked leg of lamb, pulled pork, deep-fried turkey, smoked and stuffed chicken breasts, and even a seafood casserole. Sides and accompaniments include fried pickles, black-eyed pea hummus, grilled peaches, and a bread pudding with bourbon. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is a table of metric equivalents on the inside back cover.
Quality/price rating: 88.
 
 
 
25.MAN MADE MEALS; the essential cookbook for guys (Workman Publishing, 2014; distr. T. Allen, 631 pages, ISBN 978-0-7611-6644-3, $24.95 US paper covers) is by Steven Raichlen, author of seven grilling books (one of which is the award-winning Barbecue! Bible which I reviewed in 1998, with its 500 BBQ recipes) and host of the PBS series Barbecue University and Primal Grill. The book concentrates on guy food: heavy, substantial flavours, lots of protein and starches. Veggies are mainly chiles, beans, corn, potatoes, mushrooms, kale, cauliflower, and collard greens, although he does have a (downplayed) salad chapter. The 300 preps here stress that knowledge is power and that all men have an inner chef who loves showing off that power. Like in the wine world, Raichlen advises kicking butt (in the introduction)-- whatever sells the book which is being billed as a cookbook, textbook, and guidebook to male cooking. He also manages to pull in material from Thomas Keller, Michael Pollan, and Mark Bittman, among others. The 17 food chapters embrace courses and meals, such as breakfast, sandwiches, pizza, breads, ribs, chili, soups, and a short sweet chapter (rum and coke float, affogato, bourbon brown cow, Mexican chocolate pudding, bananas Foster). There are lots of lists and tables (male things) scattered throughout, plus an opening primer. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there are tables of metric equivalents. I found some inconsistencies in the index, such as the matter of corn-flour-taco-tortilla. Quality/price rating: 89.
 
 
 
28.THE TEXAS FOOD BIBLE; from legendary dishes to new classics (Grand Central Life & Style, 2013, 2014; distr. Hachette, 256 pages, ISBN 978-1-4555-7430-8, $30 US hard covers) is by Dean Fearing, former chef at the Mansion on Turtle Creek and now at Fearing's. He's been a fave chef of mine for years; maybe it's his first name. Here he offers a history of Texas food through culinary experiences. He expands it all to the southwestern regional experience through such as Navajo fry bread, sweet potato spoonbread, enchiladas, and BBQ. It is a guide to regional grilling-smoking-braising, with additional recipes from other chefs. There is also material about local suppliers. He begins with a pantry, and moves through the courses of breakfast, brunch, apps, salads, mains, sides – with other chapters on the grill and BBQ. Good boldfacing of ingredient lists, as well as a list of sources. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. Try poblano-mango-carmelized onion quesadillas with cilantro-lime-sour cream, or molasses-tabasco duck with smoked veggie dressing, or even smoked salmon tartare with roast jalapeno cream and roasted garlic. Innovative stuff. Quality/price rating: 89.
 
 
29.THE NOLAN RYAN BEEF & BARBECUE COOKBOOK; recipes from a Texas kitchen (Little Brown and Co., 2014; distr. Hachette, 172 pages, ISBN 978-0-316-24826-6, $25 US hard covers) is by baseball great Nolan Ryan and three others: JP Rosenthal (food and baseball writer), Cristobal Vazquez (executive chef at Texas Rangers Ballpark), and Charlie Bradbury (CEO of Nolan Ryan Beef). Texas BBQ is all about beef, so here it is: hamburgers, hot dogs, T-bones, rib-eyes, strip steaks, tenderloins, sirloin, roasts, ribs, brisket, flank steak, flat iron steak – plus some salads and sides and desserts. It is not Dean Fearing, but it is Texas and it is beef. The idea too is to pitch Texas beef, specifically Beefmaster cattle (half Brahman, quarter Hereford, quarter Shorthorn). So you can order it, at least in the USA, and try it out on the BBQ grill. He's got easy T-bone with soy and pineapple, slow-roasted prime rib with natural jus, beer-braised country ribs, and grilled balsamic flank steak. It is a good introduction to Texas beef, with many compelling recipes. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating: 87.
 
 
 
 
30.SAUSAGE MAKING (Chronicle Books, 2014, 207 pages, ISBN 978-1-4521-0178-1, $35 US hard covers) is by Ryan Farr, author of Whole Beast Butchery, and owner of 4505 Meats, an artisanal meat company where he teaches butchery classes and makes sausages. Jessica Battilana is the focusing food writer. It is a basic book for home cooks, with the techniques skills and equipment needed for cooking/curing/smoking every type of sausage. The arrangement is by texture, with a section on coarse (chorizo, merguez, Italian), firm (linguica, Polish, bratwurst), soft (boudin noir, scrapple), smooth (bierwurst, bologna, wieners), and combination (duck confit and cherry terrine, headcheese). There is a major discussion of selecting meats and fats (including frog), techniques of grinding-mixing-stuffing-twisting, and cooking styles – most with photos. Typical preps of the 38 sausages here include those for goat sausage with peppers, turkey-apple-campari sausage, guinea hen and kimchee links, smoked trout and pork sausage, and the veal-sweetbread-morels en croute combo. Other recipes cover condiments and breads. There is a resources list and a picture of a side view of each sausage. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both US and metric measurements, along with ratio tables. Quality/price rating: 89.
 
 
34.TRUE FOOD; season, sustainable, simple, pure (Little,
Brown, 2012, 2104, 255 pages, ISBN 978-0-316-12940-4, $19 US
paper covers) is by Andrew Weil and Sam Fox, with Michael
Stebner. Weil is well-known for his books and columns on
alternative health practices and issue (including many food
recipes). He is partner with Sam Fox in the True Food
Kitchen chain. Stebner is the executive chef of these
restaurants. The work comes heavily endowed with log
rollers Alice Waters and Marion Nestle. This is the 2014
paperback reprint. It's a book based
on SLOFE principles (seasonal, local, organic, fast, and
easy); there are about 150 recipes adapted from the six
restaurant chain. The important thing you need to know
about Andrew Weil is that the guy is completely
trustworthy: he has impressed me for over 20 years. Other
than that, this is good food with plenty of explanations
from Weil and a pantry to start up. You cannot go wrong
here. There are good illustrations and sufficient white
space in the book's layout. The chapters follow a daily
meal, with breakfast, appetizers, salads, soups, mains,
pasta, veggies, desserts and drinks (only a few with
alcohol). This is a good book for the struggling dieter –
you will get your appetite sated. Dishes include chocolate-
banana tart, stir-fried long beans with citrus-sesame
sauce, bibimbap, bison umami burger, and halibut with
fingerling potatoes. There are no tables of nutritional
sources. Preparations have their ingredients listed in
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric
equivalents, which is a shame for international sales.
Quality/price rating: 88.
 
Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

WORLD WINE WATCH (LCBO VINTAGES TIP SHEET) FOR MAY 24, 2014


WORLD WINE WATCH (LCBO VINTAGES TIP SHEET) FOR  MAY 24, 2014
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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 LCBO 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.
 
**** HALF-BOTTLE ALERT !! – Kim Crawford Sauvignon Blanc 2013 Marlborough, +160085, $9.95 375 mL: an herbal savvy, just perfect for two glasses (two people) as a starter course wine, and well-priced. QPR: 90.
 
====?>>> ** BEST WINE VALUE OF THE RELEASE *UNDER* $20
 
Domaine Les Yeuses Les Epices Syrah 2011 Pays d'Oc, +177584, $14.95: it's back, but
another vintage, just as good as ever – even better. Value priced, great syrah hit of pepper, smoked meat, black fruit, garrigue, blackberries. Perfect accompaniment to horse meat. I've said virtually the same things about the last four times this has turned up in Vintages (the 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, and now 2011). 13.5% ABV. Up a dollar, but then so is everything else in life. QPR: 93.
 
====?>>> ** BEST WINE VALUE OF THE RELEASE *OVER* $20
 
E.Guigal Chateau d'Ampuis Chateauneuf-du-Pape 2007, +727503, $59.95.
 
 
TOP VALUE WHITE WINES under $20 or so.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1.Mission Hill Family Reserve Pinot Gris 2012 VQA Okanagan, +537076, $17.95: lively, lots of flavour for a pinot gris but very good MVC for that Alsatian-styled consistency. Cork finish, 13.5% ABV. QPR: 89.
2.Calamus Riesling 2012 VQA Vinemount Ridge, +158642, $16.95: immediate riesling hit on the nose, serve cool, so Mosel-like. Twist top, 11% ABV. QPR: 89.
3.Vineland Estates Chardonnay Musque 2011 VQA Niagara Escarpment, +996793, $17.95: flavourful, slightly grapey muskiness from the clonal character, floral for summer!! Cork finish. QPR: 89.
4.Yamhill Valley Vineyards Pinot Gris 2011 Willamette Valley Oregon, +366294, $17.95: a refreshing change, depth and flavour, twist top, quality wine with cooler climate orchard fruit and lemon drops. QPR: 89.
5.Beauvignac Picpoul de Pinet 2013 Coteaux du Languedoc, +350124, $13.95: fresh from last year's vintage, much like an upscale soave but less expensive, more expansive. QPR: 89.
 
TOP VALUE RED WINES under $20 or so.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1.Henry of Pelham Family Tree Red 2012 VQA Niagara, +247882, $18.95: quite a lot of character for a blend of Bordeaux varieties and shiraz, lots of flavour, great BBQ wine. 13.5% ABV. QPR: 89
2.La Casa del Rey Alta Vista Premium Cabernet Sauvignon 2012 Mendoza, +129957, $15.95: quality in spades here, juicy, 14.5% ABV, North American appeal, but taut enough for food. QPR: 89.
3.Fabre Montmayou Reserva Malbec 2012 Mendoza, +261867, $15.95: another plummy, delicious fruit tones to go with food. 14.9% ABV. QPR: 89.
4.Luis Felipe Edwards Claro Magnolio Reserve Malbec 2011 Colchagua, +365932, $13.95: the Chileans are taking a crack at Malbec, this one has typical plummy value, 14% ABV, cork finish. QPR: 89.
5.Audacia Shiraz 2011 WO Stellenbosch, +366211, $13.95: a pretty good syrah in Euro mode, not in the shiraz style despite the label. Off-dry on palate, 14% ABV. QPR: 89.
6.Chateau Saint Esteve D'Uchaux Massif d'Uchaux Cotes du Rhone Villages 2010, +370189, $18.95: impressive southern Rhone, with a lot of syrah and aging behind it. Dark fruit, long length. QPR: 89.
7.Domaine Martin Plan de Dieu Cotes du Rhone Villages 2011, +370197, $19.95: very intense syrah component, 15% ABV. The best of the CdR Villages out today. Unfiltered smoke, with tar and all those other bad things like some brett. More savoury than fruity. QPR: 91.
 
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.Mike Weir Limited Edition Barrel Fermented Chardonnay 2012, +367813, $24.95 retail.
2.Jean Pabiot & Fils Domaine des Fines Caillottes Pouilly-Fume 2012, +695908, $26.95.
3.Roger & Didier Raimbault Sancerre 2012, +82255, $27.95.
4.Albert Morot Beaune Les Teurons 1er Cru 2011, +902833, $59.95.
5.Lazzeretti Brunello di Montalcino 2007, +318352, $42.95.
6.F. Olazabal Meandro Do Vale Meao 2011 Douro, +244731, $24.95.
7.Cosme Palacio Reserva 2007 Rioja, +14662, $23.95.
8.Heredad de Baroja Gran Reserva 2004 Rioja, +276113, $24.95.
9.Jean Olivier Chateau d'Aqueria Tavel 2013, +319368, $21.95.

Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Sunday, May 18, 2014

THE REISSUES, THE REPRINTS, AND THE NEWER EDITIONS...

...all reflect a boom in the cookbook publishing business. A paperback reprint will lower the cost to the purchaser, and also give a publisher a chance to correct egregious errors or add a postscript. Some will reissue a book in paper covers with a new layout or photos. Others will rearrange existing material to present it as more informative text while keeping the focus tight. Some magazines will reissue popular or classic recipes in an "easy" format. Here are some recent "re-editions"...


28.TEA; history, terroirs, varieties. 2D ed (Firefly Books, 2014, 270 pages,
ISBN 978-1-77085-319-5, $24.95 CAD paper covers) is a heavily
illustrated compendium on non-herbal tea, rich in anti-oxidants and 
with proven medical benefits. It was originally published in French in
Quebec in 2009, and here is translated into English. The second edition reflects a general updating with more material on health benefits.   The four writers of this book own The Camellia Sinensis Tea House in Montreal and work
as tasters, traveling the world looking for teas. Jonathan Racine who
works for the Tea House did the editorial work. Topics include a primer
on tea, varieties, processing, cultivars, making-serving-tasting tea,
tea ceremonies, and tea in cooking (with 14 recipes by Quebecois
chefs). The source of all non-herbal teas is the plant Camellia sinensis, which is processed three different ways to produce the major classes (black, green, oolong, white, yellow, Pu er, scented and smoked. Terroir also imparts unique character to a tea. Reference material includes a bibliography, scientific tables
for the biochemical properties of 35 teas, and a directory of teas.
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents. Throughout the book, there are profiles of tea growers. The first edition of this book was my Drink Book of the Month; this edition has the same rating: 92.



29.SUPERFOODS; the healthiest foods on the planet. 2D ed (Firefly, 2014, 256
pages, ISBN 978-1-77085-256-3, $24.95 CAD paper covers) is by
registered dietitian Tonia Reinhard, who has authored other books
dealing with vitamins and nutrition. Here, she devotes a page to each
of some 200 superfoods. The definition of such is "nutrient-dense", one
that provides a high level of nutrients in a reasonable number of
calories (that is, more bang for the buck). There have been a number of
such books over the past few years; indeed, it has even reached down to
"Superfoods for Dummies". Her book is arranged by food type:
vegetables, mushrooms, legumes, fruits, nuts and oils, herbs and
spices, grains, meats, dairy food, and beverages. In this second edition, she gives data on new research about the food ("The Healthy Evidence"), and how effective that food is.
For each superfood, she has details on nutritional content, seasonal variations,
curative value, combinations that enhance their efficacy and those to
avoid, how to maximize the beneficial effects of each, prep advice, and
culinary tips. But no recipes. There are lots here such as an
explanation of anti-oxidants, omegas, free radicals, enzymes, and
minerals. Certainly, you'd want to begin eating these foods before many
others....and quickly. There are also updated nutritional tables and a glossary.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.



30.HOW TO GROW FOOD; a step-by-step guide to growing all kinds of
fruits, vegetables, herbs, salads and more (Firefly, 2011, 2014, 256 pages,
ISBN 978-1-77085-317-1, $19.95 CAD soft covers) is by Richard
Gianfrancesco, who is a plant scientist who has co-ordinated hundreds
of garden plant tests and trials, which have been published in
magazines and online. The book has been co-published in the UK by
Quarto, and is now available as a paperback. Here he appeals to those who want to "eat local", whether from their window box or from a large backyard (maybe as much as one-third of the North American population?). He has some good principles about
organic gardening, soil management, composting, weeds and pests,
pruning, growing from seed, buying plants, and growing in containers.
In fact, his title should really be "How to Grow Real Food". The main
section is a plant-by-plant analysis for growing. He begins with
veggies and salads (potato, sweet potato, onion, lettuces, herbs, etc.
– about 64 in all), continuing with 22 fruits and three nuts. At the
end are some ideas on preserving the crop (jams, jellies, pickles,
chutneys, drying, and freezing). There's also a sowing summary, a crop
selection summary, and a list of hardiness zones. Preparations have
their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements,
but there is no table of equivalents. Most of the typeface is a shade too small for my eyes, but the index has leading and is easy to read. And there is a good explanation on how to use the book, at the front. Quality/Price Rating: 86.


31.WHERE TO EAT AROUND THE WORLD (Travel + Leisure, 2013; distr. T. Allen, 192 pages, ISBN 978-1-932624-62-5, $19.95 US soft covers) is from Travel + Leisure  magazine. After 40 years it still the largest audience of any travel magazine. Reportage includes style, culture, food and design, all complemented by superb photography. This package migrates to a book which the publisher says is "coverage into an expertly vetted collection of culinary journeys. The material includes: top restos in New York, London, and Copenhagen; exotic cuisines in Sao Paolo, Marrakesh, and Vietnam; iconic dishes in Italy, Japan and Paris; and local dishes in Texas, Dubai and South Africa. There is other experiental material about eating in such places as Hawaii, Mexico City and Shanghai. There's directory type data and recommendations on what to order, and more than 200 colour pix. There's a chapter on the search for pizza in Naples vs. Rome, another on Greek wine country, and a third on "for the love of ramen" – just some of the 27 locations in all. Quality/price rating: 88.


32.FOOD & WINE ANNUAL COOKBOOK 2014; an entire year of recipes (Food & Wine Books, 2014; distr. T. Allen, 408 pages, ISBN 978-1-932624-63-2, $32.95 US) comes from "Food & Wine" magazine, and the recipes are actually from 2013's contents (using the principle of forward dating employed by almanacs). These are most, if not all, of the recipes published in 2013. All topics and courses are covered in individual chapters, from apps to desserts, with lunches and breakfasts and brunches plus drinks in their separate sections. Each of the 700 or so recipes is  sourced as to author, with a short biography
at the back of the book for each person. Contributors are noted chefs, freelancers, staff, and professional recipe developers, such as Mario Batali, the late Marcella Hazan, and Michael Symon. Beverages are also included, as well as a
few basic recipes to round out the completeness of the book. Each main course and appetizer has been paired with a wine, listed by style or varietal name, but brands are
mentioned and may not be available in Canada. 200 staff faves have been highlighted, and over the years, it was learned that these are the ones the book purchasers try first.
All preparations are coded as to "fast", and "healthy", and "make ahead". What I like about this book is the extensive, really good index, the use of colours, and the wine pairing. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is a table of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating: 89.


33.BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS FRESH GRILLING (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014; distr. T. Allen, 288 pages, ISBN 978-0-544-24219-7, $19.99 US soft covers) is the latest in the test kitchen series from a variety of magazines in both Canad and the United States. Which ones you prefer is probably dependent on whether you read the magazine or not. Certainly, they are all affordable and represent value. Here, the BH&G magazine presents some 200 grilling recipes, each with a photo, full nutritional information, and prep and grill times. Primer data includes the basics of equipment, techniques, sauces and rubs, and a produce guide for choosing, storing and preparing fresh veggies and fruits. Arrangement is by course: apps to desserts. There's a special chapter on "quick smoke": using wood chips or planks for a smoky accent in 30 minutes or less (rosemary-orange stuffed smoked pork tenderloin, smoked duck breast with acorn squash, smoked new york strip steaks, smoky beets-orange-ribeye salad, rack of lamb with smoked potatoes, and more). Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is also a full page of tables of equivalents. Quality/price rating: 87.

34.PIZZA ON THE GRILL (Taunton Press, 2014, 186 pages, ISBN 978-1-60085-828-4, $17.95 US soft covers) is by Elizabeth Karmel, a cookbook author, AP writer, and executive chef of Hill Country Barbecue Market and Country Chicken (NYC, Brooklyn, and Wash DC) and Bob Blumer, host of various Food Network shows and author of five cookbooks. It was originally published in 2008, and sold about 60,000 copies. It has been updated by both tweaking her and there and adding 10 gluten-free recipes (plus a gluten-free pizza dough). The 60 preps are easy-to-follow, good for all tastes and body needs: vegetarian, kids, meat eaters. Each comes with ingredient substitutions plus a drink and salad suggestion to complement the flavours of the pie. All pizzas are meant for grilling, so no bake stone is needed – the heat of the grill is enough. There are the classics, the meatless, the seafood, the pork, the chicken, the beef, the veggies, even the sweeties. One for summer. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating: 86.

35.28 DAYS TO YOUNGER SKIN (Robert Rose, 2013, 2014, 253 pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0480-2, $24.95 CAN paper covers) is by Karen Fischer, who has authored other Rose books on skin care and eczema and diets. An earlier book offered a diet for 8 weeks with 100 recipes. This one goes for only 4 weeks, with only 50 or so recipes – a fast track program for people who have a special occasion coming up, such as a wedding, a holiday, or family/school reunion. It is a supplement to any current skin program one is using, and was originally published in Australia in 2013. Why 28 days? It takes that long for skin cells to be produced and travel to the surface. Also, it takes 21 days to break or form new habits, so 28 days seems to be an ideal run. One's metabolism will be boosted, and nutrients supplied for renewal and maintenance. But it will take some work since this is   a fast-track, not a lifestyle change. Her top 12 foods include dark leafy greens, red quinoa, black sesame seeds, blueberries, pomegranate, red onion, yellow curry powder, cloves, and more. Each recipe has nutritional data and tips, etc. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents. There is, though, a resources list to check out and track down all the research she gives us. And the usual Rose production of large print and leading.
Quality/price rating: 88.


36.THE SCIENCE OF WINE; from vine to glass. 2D ed.  (University of California Press, 2005, 2012, 216 pages, ISBN 978-0-520-27689-5, $39.95 US hard covers) is by Jamie Goode, UK wine writer and columnist. The first edition in 2006 was the Glenfiddich Drink Book of the Year. It's a great introduction to the scientific and technical innovations applied to grape-growing and winemaking. It explains how the practical applications of science affects the quality, flavour and perception of wine. In addition, there is also some material on Mother Nature: how climate change and global warming is also affecting wine production and styles. As it is about the "science" of wine, it also covers biodynamics, health benefits, and screw cap closures. New to this edition is a discussion of genetically modified grapevines, sulphur dioxide, the future of cork, wine flavour chemistry; updating by new chapters  has occurred for soils, vines, oxygen management, red wine production techniques, and the role of language. An immensely accessible book, written for the lay person, and with a glossary at the end. But no footnotes or bibliography. Quality/price rating: 90.

Dean Tudor, Wine Writer, www.deantudor.com