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Wednesday, July 18, 2018

WORLD WINE WATCH TOP 20/20 WINES: 20 under $20 and 20 over $20 for July 21, 2018

 
WORLD WINE WATCH TOP 20/20 WINES: 20 under $20 and 20 over $20 for July 21, 2018
 
By DEAN TUDOR, Gothic Epicures Writing deantudor@deantudor.com. My "Wines, Beers and Spirits of the Net", a guide to thousands of news items and RSS feeds, plus references to wines, beers and spirits, has been at http://www.deantudor.com since 1994.
These notes for wines available through the LCBO Vintages (on a bi-weekly basis)  can always be found at http://www.gothicepicures.blogspot.ca/ or at  http://www.deantudor.com
 
Scores are a combination of MVC (Modal Varietal Character, e.g. a Southern Rhone tastes like a Southern Rhone) and QPR (Quality/Price Ratio value in the marketplace above or below its price).
 
THIS MONTH'S SPECIAL FINDS --
 
+991562 Bailly Lapierre Reserve Brut Cremant de Bourgogne NV $19.95. 93 points
+360248 Giuseppe B. Carpano Antica Formula Vermouth 375 mL $16.95. 94 points
 
20 under $20
=========
W+246579    CAVE SPRING ESTATE BOTTLED CHARDONNAY MUSQUÉ    Cave Spring Vineyard, VQA Beamsville Bench, Niagara Escarpment 2016 $17.95      13.5 % ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
W+258806    ROSEWOOD SÜSSRESERVE RIESLING    VQA Niagara Escarpment        2016    $15.95    11.2% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+443507    SANTA EMA GRAN RESERVA SAUVIGNON BLANC    DO Leyda Valley        2017    $15.95    13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+456020    RUSTENBERG STELLENBOSCH SAUVIGNON BLANC    WO Stellenbosch        2017    $14.95     MVC/QPR: 89
W+169474    HUNAWIHR KUHLMANN-PLATZ VIEILLES VIGNES GEWURZTRAMINER    AC Alsace        2016    $19.95 13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 91
W+363150    LE FILS DES GRAS MOUTONS MUSCADET SÈVRE-ET-MAINE SUR LIE    AC    Claude Branger, vign.-récolt.    2016    $14.95 12% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
W+562231    CLAUDIO QUARTA SANPAOLO FIANO    IGP Campania        2016    $14.95 13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+366948    FONTANAFREDDA GAVI DI GAVI DOCG 2016    $18.95     MVC/QPR: 89
W+543785    HACIENDA LOPEZ DE HARO BLANCO    DOCa Rioja    Bodega Classica    2016    $14.95     MVC/QPR: 90
R+606764    ARBOLEDA SINGLE VINEYARD CABERNET SAUVIGNON    DO Aconcagua Valley        2015    $19.95  14%ABV,MVC/QPR: 89
R+569699    TABALÍ PEDREGOSO GRAN RESERVA CABERNET SAUVIGNON    DO Maipo Valley        2015    $15.95    14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+682005    JIM JIM THE DOWN-UNDERDOG SHIRAZ    South Australia    Hugh Hamilton    2015    $16.95    14.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+24034    WIRRA WIRRA CHURCH BLOCK CABERNET SAUVIGNON/SHIRAZ/MERLOT    McLaren Vale, South Australia        2015    $19.95    14.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
R+550293    CHÂTEAU LOUMELAT CUVÉE J.J. LESGOURGUES    AC Côtes de Bordeaux - Blaye        2015    $16.95    12.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+487173    GEORGES DUBOEUF BELLES GRIVES MORGON    AC        2014    $18.95 12.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
R+103705    LAPLACE MADIRAN    AP        2015    $18.95 13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
R+684753    PORCA DE MURÇA RESERVA TINTO    DOC Douro    Companhia Geral da Agricultura das Vinhas do Alto Douro    2014    $18.95     13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+488015    QUINTA DO ESPÍRITO SANTO    Vinho Regional Lisboa    Casa Santos Lima    2015    $12.95    15% ABV, MVC/QPR: 92
R+39925    CUNE CRIANZA    DOCa Rioja        2014    $16.95  13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 91
R+461269    IZADI RESERVA    DOCa Rioja        2013    $19.95     14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
 
20 over $20
=========
W+465724    RODNEY STRONG SONOMA COAST CHARDONNAY    Sonoma Coast        2015    $29.95             13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
R+558684    BREMERTON BATONNAGE SHIRAZ/MALBEC    Langhorne Creek, South Australia        2015    $34.95      MVC/QPR: 88
R+553008    CHÂTEAU TRONQUOY-LALANDE    AC Saint-Estèphe        2012    $57.95  13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+167338    LUCA G LOT CHARDONNAY    Tupungato, Uco Valley, Mendoza    Laura Catena, prop.    2016    $32.95     13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
W+265090    LA CHABLISIENNE MONTMAINS CHABLIS 1ER CRU    AC        2015    $34.95    13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
W+653154    GÉNETIN POUILLY-FUMÉ     Tinel-Blondelet 2015    $28.95    13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
R+561035    2027 CELLARS EDGEROCK VINEYARD PINOT NOIR    VQA Twenty Mile Bench, Niagara Peninsula        2016    $24.95    13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+555813    PYROS BARREL SELECTED MALBEC    Pedernal Valley, San Juan        2015    $21.95    14.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+63891    EMILIANA COYAM    Los Robles Estate, DO Colchagua Valley        2014    $29.95    PMA  14.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
R+410019    HOWARD PARK MIAMUP CABERNET SAUVIGNON    Margaret River, Western Australia        2015    $22.95    14.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 91
R+692301    PENCARROW PINOT NOIR    Martinborough, North Island    Palliser Estate    2016    $24.95     MVC/QPR: 89
R+550459    CHÂTEAU TOURANS    AC Saint-Émilion Grand Cru        2014    $34.95    14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
R+550442    CHÂTEAU NOAILLAC    Cru Bourgeois, AC Médoc        2014    $21.95 13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+556381    HENRI DE VILLAMONT PINOT NOIR Bourgogne 2014     $22.95 12.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+556407    MOILLARD CUVÉE PRESTIGE RULLY     2015    $28.95    13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 91
T+539403    SILVIO GRASSO BAROLO    DOCG        2012    $47.95 14.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+247262    ALEJANDRO PESQUERA CRIANZA    DO Ribera del Duero        2014    $34.95 14.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 91
R+482158    URBINA SELECCIÓN CRIANZA Rioja 1999 $32.95 13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 91
 

Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

RE: SOME MORE FOOD AND DRINK BOOKS IN REVIEW

Thank you!!!

 

I books accumulating downstairs. I’ll send them off J

 

 

All my best,

Danielle Johnson, Senior Publicist

Raincoast Books | 2440 Viking Way, Richmond, BC V6V 1N2  

Direct Line (604) 448-7163 | www.raincoast.com

 

 

 

From: Dean Tudor [mailto:dtudor@pathcom.com]
Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2018 6:50 AM
To: blog1
Subject: SOME MORE FOOD AND DRINK BOOKS IN REVIEW

 

THE CURRY GUY (Quadrille, 2017, 161 pages, ISBN 978-1-78713-143-9 $19.99 USD hardbound) is by Dan Toombs, who runs a website www.greatcurryrecipes.net which draws about 130,000 visit a month. His book concentrates on “Indian restaurant cooking” in the UK, that is, foods you are most likely to encounter in a restaurant setting. Many people are happy enough with ethnic food to merely replicate a fave dish or two at home. Here are 100 such recipes, headed by butter chicken. It is arranged by base recipes, appetizers, classic curries, grilling and BBQ, popular side dishes, and accompaniments and breads. Preparations have their ingredients listed a bit haphazardly in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.

Audience and level of use: those who eat out in Indian restaurants.

Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: butter chicken is derived from leftover tandoori marinades in a curry, ostensibly created by the first tandoori restaurant in India (1947).

The downside to this book: a bit short, I wanted more

The upside to this book: good idea for sticking to basics that people are familiar with.

Quality/Price Rating: 86.

 

 

4.DOCTOR'S ORDERS (Hardie Grant Books, 2017, 144 pages, ISBN 978-1-78488-137-5 $14.99 USD hardcovers) is by the team of Chris Edwards and Dave Tregenza who are both deep into UK bar consultancies. It's a collection of 50 preps of classic cocktails, medicinal tonics, and contemporary concoctions to cure whatever ails you. Typical ailments are broken hearts, hangovers, and lack of energy. There is the usual primer for a home bar (glasses, base recipes, equipment, bottles) and then the preps are arranged by remedies, comforters, revivers, and restorations. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, with no table of equivalents.

Audience and level of use: those looking for a basic catch-all book of cocktails.

Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Beets by Wray (root-based daiquiri), apple a day, watermelon G & T, citizen cane, last word.

The downside to this book: a bit short

The upside to this book: good value for the price.

Quality/Price Rating: 86

 

 

 

5.LAGOM (Quadrille, 2017, 192 pages, ISBN 978-1-78713-037-1 $29.99 USD hardbound) is by Swedish food stylist and writer Steffi Knowles-Dellner. She develops recipes for several Scandinavian brands and teaches Nordic cooking classes. This is the Swedish art of eating harmoniously; “lagom” means just the right amount, as in moderation or balance. In cookbook-land it is related to the Danish “hygge” (comforting, cozy food). Her book is arranged by course (breakfast, lunch, light bites, mains, desserts, baking) with Swedish titles. There are about 100 preps here, emphasizing moderation (as developed in her opening comments and introductions). Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.

Audience and level of use: those looking for a new twist in food preps.

Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: buckwheat, chive and lemon pancakes with smoked salmon; wholemeal scone muffins; autumn salad; almond milk=braised pork belly; pearl barley risotto; spelt pizza; rye crispbreads; salmon burgers with corn salsa; coconut semolina cake.

The downside to this book: to complete the balance theme I think I would have appreciated menus and menu ideas for a whole meal, not just the one dish.

The upside to this book: the cuisine is global.

Quality/Price Rating: 89.

 

 

 

 

6.POSH PANCAKES (Quadrille Books, 2018, 176 pages, ISBN 978-1-84949-803-6 $19.99 USD hardbound) is by Sue Quinn, a UK recipe writer and food stylist. This book is one of a series – first word titled POSH – and dealing with TOAST, EGGS, KEBABS, and RICE (they have been reviewed here before). PANCAKES is new. Here are 70 easy recipes for everything from hoppers to hotcakes. The main intent is rise about the mundane and show some pancakes with pizzaz. It's arranged by course, from breakfast through to dinner (no reason why you cannot have pork-fennel-chili baked pancakes, cheesy pancakes with creamed greens, or chicken and sweetcorn pancakes). Just a modest amount of prep work, and many basic forms can be cooked up in advanced and reheated with added sauces, etc.

Preparations have their ingredients listed in metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.

Audience and level of use: millennials

Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: rye crepes with lardons and goat cheese; oatmeal pancakes with fruit salad and lime syrup; ham hock and rose harissa crepes; pears and walnuts, salted caramel crepes.

Quality/Price Rating: 88

 

 

7.ON THE SIDE; a sourcebook of inspiring side dishes (Bloomsbury, 2017, 336 pages, ISBN 978-1-4088-7315-1, $28 USD) is by Ed Smith, a UK food writer with articles in the Independent and the Guardian, plus his own award-winning website “Rocket & Squash”. This is his first book, and it comes loaded with A-list logrollers such as Nigel Slater and Yotam Ottolenghi. It is a collection of side dishes (which can easily be expanded to mains or for sharing platters), arranged by type: green leaves and herbs; veggies plus fruits, flowers and bulbs; roots, squash and potatoes; grains, pulses, pasta and rice. At the end there is a great recipe directory with suggested accompaniments (and page references) for mains such as roast beef, stews and casseroles, BBQ, cheeses, souffle, cold cuts, duck , seafood, lobster, etc. This is followed by two other handy indexes (with page references) to WHERE the food is prepared (counter, oven) and HOW LONG it will take (less than 15 minutes, 15 – 30, 30 to an hour, etc.). And of course, the main index itself. Preparations have their ingredients listed in metric and avoirdupois measurements, which can be confusing since it is one or the other, and not both.  But there is no table of equivalents.

Audience and level of use: those looking for a different kind of cookbook.

Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: bulgur wheat salad; quick romesco; lemon and olive oil fregola; runner beans with bacon and walnuts; bread sauce and parsnip crisps; butter-braised chicory; nutmeg neeps; steamed marinated fennel; white wine and dill carrots.

The downside to this book: ingredient quantities mixed units of measurement.

The upside to this book: the indexes.

Quality/Price Rating: 89.

 

 

8.150 BEST WAFFLE MAKER RECIPES (Robert Rose, 2018, 192 pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0589-2, $19.95 CAD paperbound) is by cookbook author Marilyn Haugen and home economist Jennifer MacKenzie (who also writes cookbooks). At home, we don't have many single purpose pieces of equipment. Just a blender, a food processor, and a Kitchen Aid – which do many of the things we need to do in the kitchen. However, we do have a waffle maker because my wife does love waffles, and they are very hard to cook in a Kitchen Aid. Waffles are the kind of food you tend to eat out, much like french fries: they're a lot of work and need specialized equipment. Here the team expands on the usefulness of the waffle maker beyond the traditional waffles. The classics are here, but there are also preps for vegan and gluten-free waffles, plus sandwiches, pizzas, mains, and snacks. And it's a very useful book to have the kids cook from. There are resourceful sections here on how to buy a waffle maker (we have both stovetop and electric at home); the grids are useful  for grilling, like a panini maker. The layout is typical Robert Rose with both metric and avoirdupois measurements in each recipe, plus tips and service and variations.

Audience and level of use: families

Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Club Wafflewich, crispy crab cakes with chipotle aioli, pico de gallo chicken quesadillas, stuffed pepperoni and olive pizza pies.

The downside to this book: I wanted more

The upside to this book: a good book for family.

Quality/Price Rating: 86,

 

 

9.SERIOUSLY GOOD FREEZER MEALS (Robert Rose, 2018, 368 pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0591-5 $24.95 USD paperbound) is by Karrie Truman, a blogger (happymoneysaver.com} who can actually make 50 freezer meals in a day. Her blog appeals to those on a budget who cook from scratch. And of course, storage in a freezer is the best thing. We've had a freezer at home for over 40 years now (actually, the first one lasted 25 years and we are now on to another one) and it is full of single items and prepared meals such as ragu or pot pies. So this is another Robert Rose single equipment book, chock full (150 preps) of freezer meals. She's got preps for the whole family: dietary needs, small and large families, time constraints. Freezer bags are the main containers: they can be reused. Of course, all freezer meals will lose their taste after awhile, so they need to be used up by rotation. There's a lot of primer material here on the hows and whys of freezing, followed by the preps. Most recipes have a bulk batch guide so you can increase or decrease the serving size (the servings are mainly for 6). Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.

Audience and level of use: families

Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: smoky pulled pork sandwiches; pad thai; tikka masala; sun-dried tomato and bacon chicken; chili; coconut cashew basil curry soup.

The downside to this book: the book is over-sized and heavy, but I guess if you can prep many dishes a day for the freezer, then you can lug around the book.

The upside to this book: a useful freezer book with an international scope.

Quality/Price Rating: 88

 

 

 

 

10.THE COMPLETE PLATE (Figure 1, 2018, 307 pages, ISBN 978-1-77327-015-9 $29.95 CAD paperbound) is by Lauren Klukas, a certified personal trainer with a heart problem. This led her to establish a website – The Complete Plate – dealing with nutrition and cooking. She's been endorsed/logrolled by three RDs, and her contributing authors include Janine Elenko RD, and Ashlee Gillespie, a pastry chef specializing in gluten-free cooking. It's a massive book well-worth your attention, with 120 recipes and 30 meal plans. Her tome concentrates on weight maintenance and weight loss through a balanced diet of ingredients that meet both nutritional and calorie demands. The meal plans are for 1500, 2000 and 2500 calories. The recipes tend to be on the appetizing side, which is a good thing. The opening 30 pages give the primer basics, which is followed by the menus and then the recipes, all with nutrient analyses. Attention is given to gluten-free and special dietary matters. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there are also tables of equivalents.

Audience and level of use: families, those wishing a healthier lifestyle.

Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: green bean, feta, walnut, and pomegranate salad; grilled squash salad; roast chicken with veggies; Arctic char and wild rice; tuna quinoa bake; yellow bell pepper and chicken fajitas.

The downside to this book: small print, especially for the ingredients, and a grey (not black) ink tone – hard to read!

The upside to this book: the conversion charts are listed in the table of contents!

Quality/Price Rating: 89.

 

 

 

11.PLATTERS AND BOARDS (Chronicle Books, 2018, 224 pages, ISBN 978-1-4521-6415-1 $24.95 USD hardbound) is by Shelly Westerhausen, a vegetarian food blogger, and Wyatt Worcel who was responsible for the meat platters. It is a great book for grazers and snackers, and for parties, and the like. I find it also works for groups of two people sharing a bottle of sparkling wine. Here are all the essentials for creating a small smorgasbord or spread – all on a platter. The chapters are arranged by time: morning, noon, afternoon, evening, and “anytime”. In the beginning the primer directs you to the types of boards and assembly points. There are serving forks and spoons. There are condiments.  And, of course, there is the arrangement. They've got layouts for you, as well as drinking tips. Near the preps there is “A Board for Every Occasion” with listings of appropriate boards for baby showers (with page references), girls night, weekend dinner, and dinner party starters (i.e., apps). At the end there are recipes for the essentials, such as crostini, smokey sweet mixed nuts, cheese straws, cheddar crackers, lager whole-grain mustard, compound butters and pestos. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements with some metric, but there is no conversion tables of equivalents.

Audience and level of use: millennial, party goers and party givers.

Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: lazy Sunday brunch board; park picnic spread; teatime spread; movie night board; grill out platter; mainly meat charcuterie board; pickle platter; Southern-style board.

The downside to this book: not enough of it!!

The upside to this book: a great idea whose time has come.

Quality/Price Rating: 90.

 

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

 

* THE RESTAURANT/CELEBRITY COOKBOOK...

  +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

 

...is one of the hottest trends in cookbooks. Actually, they’ve been around for many years, but never in such proliferation. They are automatic best sellers, since the book can be flogged at the restaurant or TV show and since the chef ends up being a celebrity somewhere, doing guest cooking or catering or even turning up on the Food Network. Most of these books will certainly appeal to fans of the chef and/or the restaurant and/or the media personality. Many of the recipes in these books actually come off the menus of the restaurants involved. Occasionally, there will be, in these books, special notes or preps, or recipes for items no longer on the menu. Stories or anecdotes will be related to the history of a dish. But because most of these books are American, they use only US volume measurements for the ingredients; sometimes there is a table of metric equivalents, but more often there is not. I’ll try to point this out. The usual shtick is “favourite recipes made easy for everyday cooks”. There is also PR copy on “demystifying ethnic ingredients”. PR bumpf also includes much use of the magic phrase “mouth-watering recipes” as if that is what it takes to sell such a book. I keep hearing from readers, users, and other food writers that some restaurant recipes (not necessarily from these books) don’t seem to work at home, but how could that be? The books all claim to be kitchen tested for the home, and many books identify the food researcher by name. Most books are loaded with tips, techniques, and advice, as well as gregarious stories about life in the restaurant world. Photos abound, usually of the chef bounding about. The celebrity books, with well-known chefs or entertainers, seem to have too much self-involvement and ego. And, of course, there are a lot of food photo shots, verging on gastroporn. There are endorsements from other celebrities in magnificent cases of logrolling. If resources are cited, they are usually American mail order firms, with websites. Some companies, though, will ship around the world, so don’t ignore them altogether. Here’s a rundown on the latest crop of such books...

 

 

 

12.PASTA REINVENTED (DK Books, 2018, 192 pages, ISBN 978-1-4654-6994-6 $19.95 USD paperbound) is by Caroline Bretherton, who has worked in the food industry for two decades. She has authored or co-authored a dozen books. She's had a successful restaurant and a career with the Food Network in presentation and hosting. Here she delves into alternative noodles that are gluten-free, through 80 recipes. The range includes GF grains, legume pastas, nut pastas, veggie noddles, and others. Her primer explains all, including how to create your own vegetable noodles. She has specific preps for beet and rice flour dough, spinach and millet flour dough, sorghum and squid ink flour dough, almond and tapioca, spelt and chestnut, chickpea, buckwheat, and corn. There are many notes on shaping hand cut doughs, then she moves on to pasta soups, pasta salads, pasta bowls, and pasta bakes. Typical are sweet potato and rosemary noodle kugel, lamb and feta pastitsio, almond fettuccine with crab and lemon sauce, and then black sesame and coconut curry bowl. At the back there are pages on substitutions and swapping. Truly an innovative book with many new ideas for the jaded cook or chef. The book could have been improved if it also used volume metric in the recipes, or at least had a metric conversion chart. Quality/price rating: 89.

 

 

 

* 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”...

 

 

13.GOOD FISH (Sasquatch Books, 2011, 2018, 326 pages, ISBN 978-1-63217-107-8 $29.95 USD paperbound) is by Becky Selengut, a Seattle-based cooking teacher and private chef. It was originally published in 2011; this edition has been updated and expanded. Much has changed in the previous 8 years regarding Pacific fish: limits to overfishing has brought back stock and acquaculture has much improved. The 15 species covered in the first edition are still “good fish”. The new varieties include mahi-mahi and wahoo (Hawaii), herring, razor clams, pacific cod, and lingcod. Some of the originals got expanded and re-organized, such as wild salmon (moist-heat and dry-heat) and halibut. Her basic “good fish” rules are F (farmed is OK with verification), I (investigate provenance), S (smaller is best fish), and H (home domestic fish are best for the economy). She's got 100 recipes, and in addition to techniques, she has a bunch of URL links for her free videos which show you “how to” – fillet a fish, wok-smoke fish, clean a geoduck, sear a scallop, and more. This is a good assortment of sustainable seafood recipes from the Pacific coast. Now, time for something from the Atlantic. The book could have been improved if it also used metric in the recipes, but at least it had metric conversion charts. Quality/price rating: 89

 

----------------------------------------------------


Chimo! www.deantudor.com

SOME MORE FOOD AND DRINK BOOKS IN REVIEW

THE CURRY GUY (Quadrille, 2017, 161 pages, ISBN 978-1-78713-143-9 $19.99 USD hardbound) is by Dan Toombs, who runs a website www.greatcurryrecipes.net which draws about 130,000 visit a month. His book concentrates on "Indian restaurant cooking" in the UK, that is, foods you are most likely to encounter in a restaurant setting. Many people are happy enough with ethnic food to merely replicate a fave dish or two at home. Here are 100 such recipes, headed by butter chicken. It is arranged by base recipes, appetizers, classic curries, grilling and BBQ, popular side dishes, and accompaniments and breads. Preparations have their ingredients listed a bit haphazardly in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: those who eat out in Indian restaurants.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: butter chicken is derived from leftover tandoori marinades in a curry, ostensibly created by the first tandoori restaurant in India (1947).
The downside to this book: a bit short, I wanted more
The upside to this book: good idea for sticking to basics that people are familiar with.
Quality/Price Rating: 86.
 
 
4.DOCTOR'S ORDERS (Hardie Grant Books, 2017, 144 pages, ISBN 978-1-78488-137-5 $14.99 USD hardcovers) is by the team of Chris Edwards and Dave Tregenza who are both deep into UK bar consultancies. It's a collection of 50 preps of classic cocktails, medicinal tonics, and contemporary concoctions to cure whatever ails you. Typical ailments are broken hearts, hangovers, and lack of energy. There is the usual primer for a home bar (glasses, base recipes, equipment, bottles) and then the preps are arranged by remedies, comforters, revivers, and restorations. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, with no table of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: those looking for a basic catch-all book of cocktails.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Beets by Wray (root-based daiquiri), apple a day, watermelon G & T, citizen cane, last word.
The downside to this book: a bit short
The upside to this book: good value for the price.
Quality/Price Rating: 86
 
 
 
5.LAGOM (Quadrille, 2017, 192 pages, ISBN 978-1-78713-037-1 $29.99 USD hardbound) is by Swedish food stylist and writer Steffi Knowles-Dellner. She develops recipes for several Scandinavian brands and teaches Nordic cooking classes. This is the Swedish art of eating harmoniously; "lagom" means just the right amount, as in moderation or balance. In cookbook-land it is related to the Danish "hygge" (comforting, cozy food). Her book is arranged by course (breakfast, lunch, light bites, mains, desserts, baking) with Swedish titles. There are about 100 preps here, emphasizing moderation (as developed in her opening comments and introductions). Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: those looking for a new twist in food preps.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: buckwheat, chive and lemon pancakes with smoked salmon; wholemeal scone muffins; autumn salad; almond milk=braised pork belly; pearl barley risotto; spelt pizza; rye crispbreads; salmon burgers with corn salsa; coconut semolina cake.
The downside to this book: to complete the balance theme I think I would have appreciated menus and menu ideas for a whole meal, not just the one dish.
The upside to this book: the cuisine is global.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 
 
 
 
6.POSH PANCAKES (Quadrille Books, 2018, 176 pages, ISBN 978-1-84949-803-6 $19.99 USD hardbound) is by Sue Quinn, a UK recipe writer and food stylist. This book is one of a series – first word titled POSH – and dealing with TOAST, EGGS, KEBABS, and RICE (they have been reviewed here before). PANCAKES is new. Here are 70 easy recipes for everything from hoppers to hotcakes. The main intent is rise about the mundane and show some pancakes with pizzaz. It's arranged by course, from breakfast through to dinner (no reason why you cannot have pork-fennel-chili baked pancakes, cheesy pancakes with creamed greens, or chicken and sweetcorn pancakes). Just a modest amount of prep work, and many basic forms can be cooked up in advanced and reheated with added sauces, etc.
Preparations have their ingredients listed in metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: millennials
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: rye crepes with lardons and goat cheese; oatmeal pancakes with fruit salad and lime syrup; ham hock and rose harissa crepes; pears and walnuts, salted caramel crepes.
Quality/Price Rating: 88
 
 
7.ON THE SIDE; a sourcebook of inspiring side dishes (Bloomsbury, 2017, 336 pages, ISBN 978-1-4088-7315-1, $28 USD) is by Ed Smith, a UK food writer with articles in the Independent and the Guardian, plus his own award-winning website "Rocket & Squash". This is his first book, and it comes loaded with A-list logrollers such as Nigel Slater and Yotam Ottolenghi. It is a collection of side dishes (which can easily be expanded to mains or for sharing platters), arranged by type: green leaves and herbs; veggies plus fruits, flowers and bulbs; roots, squash and potatoes; grains, pulses, pasta and rice. At the end there is a great recipe directory with suggested accompaniments (and page references) for mains such as roast beef, stews and casseroles, BBQ, cheeses, souffle, cold cuts, duck , seafood, lobster, etc. This is followed by two other handy indexes (with page references) to WHERE the food is prepared (counter, oven) and HOW LONG it will take (less than 15 minutes, 15 – 30, 30 to an hour, etc.). And of course, the main index itself. Preparations have their ingredients listed in metric and avoirdupois measurements, which can be confusing since it is one or the other, and not both.  But there is no table of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: those looking for a different kind of cookbook.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: bulgur wheat salad; quick romesco; lemon and olive oil fregola; runner beans with bacon and walnuts; bread sauce and parsnip crisps; butter-braised chicory; nutmeg neeps; steamed marinated fennel; white wine and dill carrots.
The downside to this book: ingredient quantities mixed units of measurement.
The upside to this book: the indexes.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 
 
8.150 BEST WAFFLE MAKER RECIPES (Robert Rose, 2018, 192 pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0589-2, $19.95 CAD paperbound) is by cookbook author Marilyn Haugen and home economist Jennifer MacKenzie (who also writes cookbooks). At home, we don't have many single purpose pieces of equipment. Just a blender, a food processor, and a Kitchen Aid – which do many of the things we need to do in the kitchen. However, we do have a waffle maker because my wife does love waffles, and they are very hard to cook in a Kitchen Aid. Waffles are the kind of food you tend to eat out, much like french fries: they're a lot of work and need specialized equipment. Here the team expands on the usefulness of the waffle maker beyond the traditional waffles. The classics are here, but there are also preps for vegan and gluten-free waffles, plus sandwiches, pizzas, mains, and snacks. And it's a very useful book to have the kids cook from. There are resourceful sections here on how to buy a waffle maker (we have both stovetop and electric at home); the grids are useful  for grilling, like a panini maker. The layout is typical Robert Rose with both metric and avoirdupois measurements in each recipe, plus tips and service and variations.
Audience and level of use: families
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Club Wafflewich, crispy crab cakes with chipotle aioli, pico de gallo chicken quesadillas, stuffed pepperoni and olive pizza pies.
The downside to this book: I wanted more
The upside to this book: a good book for family.
Quality/Price Rating: 86,
 
 
9.SERIOUSLY GOOD FREEZER MEALS (Robert Rose, 2018, 368 pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0591-5 $24.95 USD paperbound) is by Karrie Truman, a blogger (happymoneysaver.com} who can actually make 50 freezer meals in a day. Her blog appeals to those on a budget who cook from scratch. And of course, storage in a freezer is the best thing. We've had a freezer at home for over 40 years now (actually, the first one lasted 25 years and we are now on to another one) and it is full of single items and prepared meals such as ragu or pot pies. So this is another Robert Rose single equipment book, chock full (150 preps) of freezer meals. She's got preps for the whole family: dietary needs, small and large families, time constraints. Freezer bags are the main containers: they can be reused. Of course, all freezer meals will lose their taste after awhile, so they need to be used up by rotation. There's a lot of primer material here on the hows and whys of freezing, followed by the preps. Most recipes have a bulk batch guide so you can increase or decrease the serving size (the servings are mainly for 6). Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: families
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: smoky pulled pork sandwiches; pad thai; tikka masala; sun-dried tomato and bacon chicken; chili; coconut cashew basil curry soup.
The downside to this book: the book is over-sized and heavy, but I guess if you can prep many dishes a day for the freezer, then you can lug around the book.
The upside to this book: a useful freezer book with an international scope.
Quality/Price Rating: 88
 
 
 
 
10.THE COMPLETE PLATE (Figure 1, 2018, 307 pages, ISBN 978-1-77327-015-9 $29.95 CAD paperbound) is by Lauren Klukas, a certified personal trainer with a heart problem. This led her to establish a website – The Complete Plate – dealing with nutrition and cooking. She's been endorsed/logrolled by three RDs, and her contributing authors include Janine Elenko RD, and Ashlee Gillespie, a pastry chef specializing in gluten-free cooking. It's a massive book well-worth your attention, with 120 recipes and 30 meal plans. Her tome concentrates on weight maintenance and weight loss through a balanced diet of ingredients that meet both nutritional and calorie demands. The meal plans are for 1500, 2000 and 2500 calories. The recipes tend to be on the appetizing side, which is a good thing. The opening 30 pages give the primer basics, which is followed by the menus and then the recipes, all with nutrient analyses. Attention is given to gluten-free and special dietary matters. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there are also tables of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: families, those wishing a healthier lifestyle.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: green bean, feta, walnut, and pomegranate salad; grilled squash salad; roast chicken with veggies; Arctic char and wild rice; tuna quinoa bake; yellow bell pepper and chicken fajitas.
The downside to this book: small print, especially for the ingredients, and a grey (not black) ink tone – hard to read!
The upside to this book: the conversion charts are listed in the table of contents!
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 
 
 
11.PLATTERS AND BOARDS (Chronicle Books, 2018, 224 pages, ISBN 978-1-4521-6415-1 $24.95 USD hardbound) is by Shelly Westerhausen, a vegetarian food blogger, and Wyatt Worcel who was responsible for the meat platters. It is a great book for grazers and snackers, and for parties, and the like. I find it also works for groups of two people sharing a bottle of sparkling wine. Here are all the essentials for creating a small smorgasbord or spread – all on a platter. The chapters are arranged by time: morning, noon, afternoon, evening, and "anytime". In the beginning the primer directs you to the types of boards and assembly points. There are serving forks and spoons. There are condiments.  And, of course, there is the arrangement. They've got layouts for you, as well as drinking tips. Near the preps there is "A Board for Every Occasion" with listings of appropriate boards for baby showers (with page references), girls night, weekend dinner, and dinner party starters (i.e., apps). At the end there are recipes for the essentials, such as crostini, smokey sweet mixed nuts, cheese straws, cheddar crackers, lager whole-grain mustard, compound butters and pestos. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements with some metric, but there is no conversion tables of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: millennial, party goers and party givers.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: lazy Sunday brunch board; park picnic spread; teatime spread; movie night board; grill out platter; mainly meat charcuterie board; pickle platter; Southern-style board.
The downside to this book: not enough of it!!
The upside to this book: a great idea whose time has come.
Quality/Price Rating: 90.
 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
* THE RESTAURANT/CELEBRITY COOKBOOK...
  +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
...is one of the hottest trends in cookbooks. Actually, they've been around for many years, but never in such proliferation. They are automatic best sellers, since the book can be flogged at the restaurant or TV show and since the chef ends up being a celebrity somewhere, doing guest cooking or catering or even turning up on the Food Network. Most of these books will certainly appeal to fans of the chef and/or the restaurant and/or the media personality. Many of the recipes in these books actually come off the menus of the restaurants involved. Occasionally, there will be, in these books, special notes or preps, or recipes for items no longer on the menu. Stories or anecdotes will be related to the history of a dish. But because most of these books are American, they use only US volume measurements for the ingredients; sometimes there is a table of metric equivalents, but more often there is not. I'll try to point this out. The usual shtick is "favourite recipes made easy for everyday cooks". There is also PR copy on "demystifying ethnic ingredients". PR bumpf also includes much use of the magic phrase "mouth-watering recipes" as if that is what it takes to sell such a book. I keep hearing from readers, users, and other food writers that some restaurant recipes (not necessarily from these books) don't seem to work at home, but how could that be? The books all claim to be kitchen tested for the home, and many books identify the food researcher by name. Most books are loaded with tips, techniques, and advice, as well as gregarious stories about life in the restaurant world. Photos abound, usually of the chef bounding about. The celebrity books, with well-known chefs or entertainers, seem to have too much self-involvement and ego. And, of course, there are a lot of food photo shots, verging on gastroporn. There are endorsements from other celebrities in magnificent cases of logrolling. If resources are cited, they are usually American mail order firms, with websites. Some companies, though, will ship around the world, so don't ignore them altogether. Here's a rundown on the latest crop of such books...
 
 
 
12.PASTA REINVENTED (DK Books, 2018, 192 pages, ISBN 978-1-4654-6994-6 $19.95 USD paperbound) is by Caroline Bretherton, who has worked in the food industry for two decades. She has authored or co-authored a dozen books. She's had a successful restaurant and a career with the Food Network in presentation and hosting. Here she delves into alternative noodles that are gluten-free, through 80 recipes. The range includes GF grains, legume pastas, nut pastas, veggie noddles, and others. Her primer explains all, including how to create your own vegetable noodles. She has specific preps for beet and rice flour dough, spinach and millet flour dough, sorghum and squid ink flour dough, almond and tapioca, spelt and chestnut, chickpea, buckwheat, and corn. There are many notes on shaping hand cut doughs, then she moves on to pasta soups, pasta salads, pasta bowls, and pasta bakes. Typical are sweet potato and rosemary noodle kugel, lamb and feta pastitsio, almond fettuccine with crab and lemon sauce, and then black sesame and coconut curry bowl. At the back there are pages on substitutions and swapping. Truly an innovative book with many new ideas for the jaded cook or chef. The book could have been improved if it also used volume metric in the recipes, or at least had a metric conversion chart. Quality/price rating: 89.
 
 
 
* 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"...
 
 
13.GOOD FISH (Sasquatch Books, 2011, 2018, 326 pages, ISBN 978-1-63217-107-8 $29.95 USD paperbound) is by Becky Selengut, a Seattle-based cooking teacher and private chef. It was originally published in 2011; this edition has been updated and expanded. Much has changed in the previous 8 years regarding Pacific fish: limits to overfishing has brought back stock and acquaculture has much improved. The 15 species covered in the first edition are still "good fish". The new varieties include mahi-mahi and wahoo (Hawaii), herring, razor clams, pacific cod, and lingcod. Some of the originals got expanded and re-organized, such as wild salmon (moist-heat and dry-heat) and halibut. Her basic "good fish" rules are F (farmed is OK with verification), I (investigate provenance), S (smaller is best fish), and H (home domestic fish are best for the economy). She's got 100 recipes, and in addition to techniques, she has a bunch of URL links for her free videos which show you "how to" – fillet a fish, wok-smoke fish, clean a geoduck, sear a scallop, and more. This is a good assortment of sustainable seafood recipes from the Pacific coast. Now, time for something from the Atlantic. The book could have been improved if it also used metric in the recipes, but at least it had metric conversion charts. Quality/price rating: 89
 
----------------------------------------------------

Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Saturday, July 14, 2018

* DRINK BOOK OF THE MONTH: Tabletop Distilling

 
 
1.TABLETOP DISTILLING (Schiffer Publishing, 2018, 176 pages, ISBN 978-0-7643-5511-0 $34.99 USD hardbound) is by Kai Moller, who wrote it for the German market in 2016. This is the English translation. In Germany, private distilleries are prohibited, and this applies to all systems between 0.5 and 5 litres boiler volume. So the book is useful for the 500 mL capacity "nano"-distilleries. Table-top distilling at its best! Given the nature of the setup and the lack of aging potential, it might be more useful to just make essences and essential oils, perhaps the odd infusion or two. If so, then this is the book for you. In this detailed book Moller applies the tools and techniques and procedures to safely distill raw materials. He covers the step-by-step nature of mashing, fermenting, distilling, and refining spirits. It's a lot of work for basic vodka or moonshine, but it is an extremely useful book for essential oils (which cost an arm and a leg on the open market). Preparations have their ingredients listed in metric measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: those looking to widen their scope of alcohol experiences, and make their own essential oils.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: "Distill whenever you feel like it. It always works...I have heated a still without a condenser and steamed water with orange peel and cloves in the chamber....This is not any more complicated than putting a tea light under a fragrance lamp."
The downside to this book: no index
The upside to this book: good for making small lots of medicinal herbs and oils.
Quality/Price Rating: 88.
 
Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Friday, July 13, 2018

FOOD BOOK OF THE MONTH! * Just Add Sauce (America's Test Kitchen)

.JUST ADD SAUCE (America's Test Kitchen, 2018, 318 pages, ISBN 978-1-945256-24-0 $29.99 USD paperbound) will pretty well sell itself. It's the 40th book they've published in the non-chronological series. This time they attack sauces: 175 simple and modern sauces that can be paired with 100 easy recipes – or make up your own!! There are small sauces, such as a dollop on veggies or drizzled on steaks, and large sauces, such as curries. All done with the American avoirdupois measurement system. The book could have been improved if it also used metric in the recipes, but at least it had metric conversion charts. The arrangement is, in fact, done up by size. The first chapter starts with drizzles and dollops, plus dips. Then it moves on to relishes and salsas, then vinaigrettes, pasta sauces, stir-fry, simmering sauces, and then dessert.
Audience and level of use: fans of the TV show
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: za'atar-rubbed chicken with yogurt-tahini sauce; roasted bone-in chicken breasts with leek and white wine pan sauce; sauteed pork chops with port-cherry pan sauce; arugula salad with pears and apple cider-sage vinaigrette; spring rolls with hoisin-peanut dipping sauce; Thai green curry with kale and squash.
The downside to this book: it can be dogmatic, but give it a chance – do it their way FIRST.
The upside to this book: their books are fairly comprehensive with notes on why the recipe works.
Quality/Price Rating: 90.
 
Chimo!   www.deantudor.com

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

The Event: Riesling & Co. Toronto German Wine Trade Show June 21 2018

The Date and Time: Wednesday June 21 2018  11:30AM - 4PM
The Event: Riesling & Co. Toronto German Wine Trade Show
The Venue: Arcadian Lofts
The Target Audience: wine trade
The Availability/Catalogue: most wines are here or on the water or available by PO. The spiral bound catalogue was a good model, with relevant names and numbers and addresses of the principals, agents and wine labels, including vintages. Prices were not available for all wines, but were listed for some. The wine tables were in catalogue order, thus we did not have to flip back and forth to find an entry.
The Quote/Background: There was a seminar "Taste the New Germany" (new wines from varietals) led by Jurgen Hammer, Director of the German Wine & Sommelier School in Berlin. There were 9 wines, and I folded them into the results below.
The Wines:  I did not taste all the wines.
 
**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Donnhoff 2015 Riesling Kreuznacher Kahlenberg Qualitatswein Trocken Nahe $48 Cons Groupe Soleil
-Donnhoff 2015 Riesling Operhauser Brucke Spatlese Nahe $65 Cons Groupe Soleil
-Donnhoff 2015 Riesling Niederhauser Hermannshohle Spatlese Nahe $76 Cons Groupe Soleil
-Donnhoff 2015 Riesling Niederhauser Hermannshohle Grosses Gewachs Nahe $105 Cons Groupe Soleil
-Weingut Pfeffingen 2016 Ungsteiner Harrenberg Grosses Gewachs Pfalz $55 Cons Context Wines
-Edition Abtei Himmerod Cremant Mosel Brut $24.95 Andrew Peller
-Hiestand 2013 JJ-Riesling Kreuz Gossese Gewachs Rheinhessen $50 Univins
-Kuhling-Gillot 2016 Riesling Qvinterra Rheinhessen $24.95  Cons Le Sommelier
-Kuhling-Gillot 2014 Riesling Kabinette aus der Steillage Rheinhessen $31.95  Cons Le Sommelier
-Meiser 2015 Riesling Alzeyer Rotenfels Rheinhessen $32.50  Winelovers
-Deinhard Gelblack Rheingau Schloss Johannisberger Gutswein $35 Mark Anthony
-Prinz von Hessen 2016 Riesling Royal Kabinett Rheingau $29.95 PO  Kylix Wines
-Prinz von Hessen 2016 Riesling Dachsfilet Rheingau $46.95 PO  Kylix Wines
-Schloss Reinhartshausen Chateau Riesling Brut Sekt Rheingau $27.95  PMA
-Schloss Reinhartshausen 2016 Riesling Schlossberg Grosses Gewachs Rheingau $37  PMA
-Schloss Reinhartshausen 2015 Riesling Hattenheimer Nussbrunnen Grosse Lage Spatlese Rheingau   PMA
-Schloss Reinhartshausen 2013 Riesling Erbacher Marcobrunn Grosse Lage Auslese Rheingau
PMA
-Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt 2016 Riesling Alte Reben Mosel $32 HHD Imports
-Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt 2016 Riesling Scharzhofberger Kabinett Mosel $24.9  Sept Vintages  ** MY FAVE WINE TODAY **
-Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt 2013 Riesling Piesporter Goldtropfchen Spatlese Mosel  HHD Imports
-Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt 2015 Riesling Josephshofer Spatlese Mosel $40 HHD Imports
-Selbach Oster 2016 Riesling Zeltinger Sonnenuhr Spatlese Mosel $38.95 +561183 Vintages
-Selbach Oster 2014 Riesling Graacher Domprobst Alte Reben Spatlese Mosel $35.95 +532721 Classics
-Dr. Loosen 2016 Riesling Dr. L Mosel Brut $13.95 +423566 LCBO
-Weingut Schloss Lieser Mosel 2016 Riesling Kabinett Wehlenher Sonnuher $32  CGU Fine Wines
-Weingut A. Christmann Pfalz 2016 Riesling $22.50 CGU Fine Wines
-Julius Treis Mosel 2014 Riesling Sekt Prestige Brut
-Weingut Siegrist Pfalz 2013 Pinot Noir Ilbesheimer Kalmir
 
***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (88 – 90 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Siegbert Bimmerle 2017 Riesling Baden Kabinett $24.95 Andrew Peller
-Siegbert Bimmerle 2017 Riesling Baden Kabinett Off-dry $24.95 Andrew Peller
-Donnhoff 2015 Riesling Trocken Nahe $28 Cons Groupe Soleil
-Weingut Lucashof 2017 Riesling Deidesheimer Herrgottsacker Erste Lage Pfalz The Vine
-Weingut Pfeffingen 2016 Dry Riesling Qualitatswein Pfalz $22 Cons Context Wines
-Kuhling-Gillot 2016 Riesling Nierstein Rheinhessen $31.95  Cons Le Sommelier
-Schloss Reinhartshausen 2016 Riesling Hattenheimer Wisselbrunnen Grosse Lage Kabinett $28.95 Rheingau   PMA
-Balthasar Ress 2016 Hattenheim Schutzenhaus Riesling Kabinett +735241 Vintages Churchill Cellars
-Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt 2017 Riesling Wiltinger Mosel $26.95   HHD Imports
-Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt 2014 Riesling Kaseler Nies'chen Kabinett Mosel $28 HHD Imports Spring 2019
-Selbach Oster 2016 Riesling Mosel $24.95 Noble Estates
-Selbach Oster 2015 Riesling Wehlener Sonnenuhr Auslese Mosel $46.95 +540476 Vintages
-Weingut Schloss Lieser Mosel 2016 Riesling Trocken $21  CGU Fine Wines
-Weingut A. Christmann Pfalz 2016 Riesling Gimmeldingen Trocken $32 CGU Fine Wines
-Hiestand 2017 Gruner Sylvaner Rheinhessen  Univins
-Weingut Nagelsforst Baden 2016 Pinot Blanc
-Weingut Lucashof Pfalz Pinot Gris 2017  The Vine
 
The Food: chicken schnitzel sliders, sausage sliders, cold cuts, cheeses, breads, fruit and nuts, dumplings, spaetzle noodles (with cheese, meats).
The Downside: I was waitlisted for the seminar, but I got in because there was a 25% rate of no shows. On behalf of my no-show "colleagues", I'd like to apologize on their behalf to the the Consul General of the Federal Republic of Germany.
The Upside: The first table was an uncatalogued tasting of some sekt wines, to set up the palate. And the second table was Donnhoff, who showed four of the top and most expensive wines in the show. What a way to start!
The Contact Person: lisa@androscom.com
The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 92.

Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Monday, July 9, 2018

The Event: The Lord of Chianti Classico tasting: Toronto June 18 2018

The Date and Time:  Monday June 18 2018  11AM to 5PM
The Event: The Lord of Chianti Classico tasting: Toronto 2018
The Venue: AGO
The Target Audience: wine trade
The Availability/Catalogue: most wines are available through the LCBO or by consignment, some are on the water, etc,
The Quote/Background: There was a seminar at 11, with about 50 attendees and nine wines (each with a rep to speak about the wines). The theme was the "9 communes" of the region – 4 from south of Florence and 5 from north of Sienna. It was a Masterclaas led by Michael Godel who carefully illustrated the microclimates with comments from the panel.
The Wines: There were 27 wines estates with a range of Chianti Classico, CC Riserva, and CC Gran Selezione. I did not taste all the wines; the seminar wines are folded into the ratings below.
 
**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Bibbiano Chianti Classico Riserva 2014 $30.95 Consignment Le Sommelier **Overall FAVE
-Cantine Melini Chianto Classico Riserva 2011  P Dandurand
-Carpineto Chianti Classico Riserva 2013 $29.95    Univins
-Casale dello Sparviero Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Vigna Parona 2013
-Castello di Fonterutoli Chianti Classico Riserva Ser Lapo 2014 $23.95 Sept Vintages
-Castello di Fonterutoli Chianti Classico Gran Selezione 2013  $60  Profile
-Castello di Gabbiano Bellezza Chianti Classico Gran Selezione 2013
-Castello di Meleto Chianti Classico Gran Selezione 2012 $69  Colio Estate
-Castello di Monsanto Chianti Classico 2016  Carpe Vinum
-Castello di Monsanto Chianti Classico Riserva Il Poggio 2016  Carpe Vinum
-Famiglia Cecchi Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Valore di Famiglia 2015  Charton Hobbs -Il Molino di Grace Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Il Margone 2012  Frontier Wine
-Lornano Chianti Classico Gran Selezione 2012  Frontier
-Principe Corsini – Villa Le Corti Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Don Tommaso 2014 Artisanal Wine Imports
-Querciabella Chianti Classico Riserva 2014  Grape Brands
-Querciabella Chianti Classico Riserva 2013 $37.95
-Rocca di Castagnoli Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Stielle 2013  Signature Wines -Ruffino Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Riserva Ducale Oro 2012  Arterra
-Viticcio Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Prunaio 2013  Eurovintage
 
***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (88 – 90 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Bibbiano Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Vigna del Capannino 2015 Le Sommelier PO
-Borgo Scopeto Chianti Classico Riserva Misciano 2013 The Case for Wine
-Carobbio Chianti Classico Riserva 2014 Apparition Wine & Spirit
-Castello di Albola Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Santa Caterina 2015
-Castello di Gabbiano Chianti Classico 2015
-Castello Vicchiomaggio Chianti Classico Gran Selezione La Prima 2015  Signature
-Famiglia Cecchi Chianti Classico Villa Cerna Primocolle 2015 $23  Charton Hobbs -Fattoria di Valiano Chianti Classico Gran Selezione 6.38 2013   Wine Lovers
-Felsina Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Colonia 2013
-Losi Querciavalle Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Losi Millennium 2010  Natural Vines
-Vallepicciola Chianti Classico Riserva 2015
-Villa Calcinaia Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Vigna Bastignano 2014 Nicholas Pearce
-Villa Trasqua Chianti Classico Gran Selezione Nerento 2012  Frontier Wine
 
The Food: this was a buffet luncheon, with quiche, two different salads (green, chickpea), asparagus and mushrooms, and brined roast chicken (drumette with some breast attached). It was tender enough that I knew it was chicken and not cooked Gallo Nero – which would have been "too much" in symbolism...but still it was close enough. LOL.
The Downside: there was a tragedy on the subway which meant that many of us were late for the 11 AM start.
The Upside: good selection of wines, and excellent food.
The Contact Person: chianticlassicotoronto@gmail.com
The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 89.
 
Chimo! www.deantudor.com

Wednesday, July 4, 2018

WORLD WINE WATCH TOP 20/20 WINES: 20 under $20 and 20 over $20 for July 7, 2018

 
WORLD WINE WATCH TOP 20/20 WINES: 20 under $20 and 20 over $20 for  July 7, 2018
 
By DEAN TUDOR, Gothic Epicures Writing deantudor@deantudor.com. My "Wines, Beers and Spirits of the Net", a guide to thousands of news items and RSS feeds, plus references to wines, beers and spirits, has been at http://www.deantudor.com since 1994.
These notes for wines available through the LCBO Vintages (on a bi-weekly basis)  can always be found at http://www.gothicepicures.blogspot.ca/ or at  http://www.deantudor.com
 
Scores are a combination of MVC (Modal Varietal Character, e.g. a Southern Rhone tastes like a Southern Rhone) and QPR (Quality/Price Ratio value in the marketplace above or below its price).
 
20 under $20
=========
W+557165    HENRY    OF    PELHAM    ESTATE    RIESLING    VQA    Short    Hills    Bench        Niagara    Escarpment        2016    $19.95  11.5 % ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
R+273672    STORIA    ANTICA    RIPASSO    VALPOLICELLA    SUPERIORE    DOC        2016    $18.95 14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+570085    ADEGAMÃE    DORY    RED    Vinho    Regional    Lisboa        2015    $15.95         14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+394288    GÉRARD    BERTRAND    GRENACHE/SYRAH/MOURVÈDRE    CORBIÈRES        2015    $18.95     14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+265983    MCMANIS    CHARDONNAY    River    Junction 2016    $19.95     13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
W+391847    THIERRY    DELAUNAY    TOURAINE    SAUVIGNON    BLANC    AC        2017    $16.95 12.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
W+701094    MAS    DES    BRESSADES    CUVÉE    TRADITION    BLANC    AP    Costières    de    Nîmes    2017    $17.95    13.5% ABV,  MVC/QPR: 90
W+599274    LOOSEN    BROS.    DR.    L    RIESLING    Qualitätswein        2016    $14.95
8.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+541805    POGGIOARGENTIERA    VERMENTINO    IGT    Toscana        2016    $16.95     12.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
W+292029    ARCA    NOVA    VINHO    VERDE    DOC    Quinta    das    Arcas    2016    $13.95 10.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+534362    CHÂTEAU    DE    CRANNE    6ÈME    GÉNÉRATION    AC    Côtes    de    Bordeaux        2014    $17.95    13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+416701    CHÂTEAU    LA    ROCHE    BAZIN    AC    Côtes    de Bordeaux Blaye        2014    $18.95     13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+426247    CHÂTEAU    LES    TOURELLES     Bordeaux 2015 $15.95 13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
R+391896    SEIN    DO    Alicante        2011    $17.95    15% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
R+310151    TARIMA    MONASTRELL    DO    Alicante    Bodegas    Volver    2015    $14.95    14.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
W+569806    CASALE    DEL    GIGLIO    SATRICO    IGT    Lazio    Bianco        2017    $17.95    13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
W+    485839    MARCEL    CABELIER    VIEILLES    VIGNES    CHARDONNAY    AP    Côtes    du    Jura        2014    $19.95    13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
R+183897    PASCUAL    TOSO    RESERVE    MALBEC    Barrancas    Vineyards        Mendoza        2015    $19.95 14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
R+557603    MCBAINS    OF    COONAWARRA    CABERNET    SAUVIGNON    Coonawarra        South    Australia        2015    $16.95    13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
R+556449    BAPTISTE    &    LAURENT    LE    MEILLEUR    DES    2    MONDES    SAINT-AMOUR    AP        2015    $19.95    13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
R+562587    DOMAINE    D'ALBAS    ROUGE    AP    Minervois        2015    $15.95 14.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
R+566059    JULES      CÔTES DE    PROVENCE    AP    2014    $18.95  13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
 
 
 
20 over $20
=========
R+82180    VIÑA    VILANO    CRIANZA    DO    Ribera    del    Duero        2013    $23.95         14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
R+213132    LA    PIEVE     BAROLO    DOCG        2013    $36.95  14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+570838    VALLEY    OF    THE    MOON    BLEND 41    Sonoma    County    Madrone    Vineyards    Estate    2013    $26.95     14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+986133    LEEUWIN    PRELUDE    VINEYARDS    CABERNET    SAUVIGNON/MERLOT    Margaret River Western    Australia        2013    $32.95    13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+158683    LA    CREMA    MONTEREY    CHARDONNAY    Monterey        2016    $26.95 13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+148866 CLOSSON CHASE VINEYARD CHARDONNAY 2016 $29.95 13.3 % ABV, MVC/QPR: 89.
W+1552    FLAT    ROCK    THE    RUSTY    SHED    CHARDONNAY    VQA    Twenty    Mile    Bench     Niagara    Escarpment    2016    $26.95     13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+424507    WESTCOTT    ESTATE    CHARDONNAY    VQA    Vinemount    Ridge        Niagara    Peninsula        2016    $27.95    13.2% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+251223    KISTLER    LES    NOISETIERS    CHARDONNAY    Sonoma    Coast        2016    $99.95    14.1% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
W+378604    KIM    CRAWFORD    WILD    GRACE SMALL PARCELS    CHARDONNAY    Hawkes Bay        North    Island        2016    $24.95 13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 90
W+931006    HAMILTON    RUSSELL    CHARDONNAY    WO    Hemel-en-Aarde    Valley        Walker    Bay        2017    $44.95    13% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89.
R+316083    SCHOLA    SARMENTI    CUBARDI    PRIMITIVO    IGT    Salento        2012    $20.95    15% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+473124    SOPRASASSO    AMARONE    DELLA    VALPOLICELLA    DOCG        2014    $34.95    15% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
R+958868    BARÓN    DE    LEY    RESERVA    Estate    bottled        DOCa    Rioja        2013    $22.95    13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
W+677450    DOG    POINT    SAUVIGNON    BLANC    Marlborough        South    Island        2017    $26.95     13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 89
W+570465    CHARTON    ET    TRÉBUCHET    POUILLY-FUISSÉ    AC        2016    $34.95 13.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
R+303511    LEGÓN    RESERVA    DO    Ribera    del    Duero    Valtostao    2012    $35.95 14% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
R+515486    CARPINETO    BRUNELLO    DI    MONTALCINO    DOCG        2012    $64.95 15% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
R+985929    ORTAS    PRESTIGE    RASTEAU    AC    Cave    de    Rasteau    2013    $20.95    14.5% ABV, MVC/QPR: 88
 

Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 

Tuesday, July 3, 2018

The Event: The annual Taste and Buy Preview of the latest (2016) vintage from Burgundy, hosted by Luc Bouchard and Woodman Wines.

The Date and Time: Thursday June 14, 2018  11AM to 3PM
The Event: The annual Taste and Buy Preview of the latest (2016) vintage from Burgundy, hosted by Luc Bouchard and Woodman Wines.
The Venue: Canoe
The Target Audience: buyers and media
The Availability/Catalogue: some wines were available at LCBO for popular wines; 2016 upper echelon wines are available via Woodman in six packs. 41 other wines were also available for ordering, but there were no tasting samples of these.
The Quote/Background: it was a smaller assortment of labels than in previous years because 2016 was one of the smallest harvests in 25 years. While weather played havoc during most of the year, there was a wonderful ripening period for the small crop. There were about 25 Grand Cru, Premier Cru and Village wines from Bouchard Pere & Fils, William Fevre Chablis, Villa Ponciago in Fleurie, and Champagne Henriot.
The Wines:  I did not taste all the wines. Indeed, I tasted very few wines since I had a deep freeze dental appointment at 10AM and could not taste. I brought along my Burgundy expert, Brian Dawson, a retired financier with deep pockets and an even deeper cellar. He assisted me in tasting and ratings. I spent the early part of the session assembling my notes and writing strategies. Prices are RETAIL.
 
**** BEST -- Four Stars (91+ in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-Champagne Henriot Brut Souverain NV $75 Consignment
-Champagne Henriot Brut Blanc de Blancs NV $105 PO
-Champagne Henriot Brut Rose NV $95 Classics +384099
-Champagne Henriot Brut Vintage 2008 $133 PO
-Champagne Henriot Brut Hemers 2005 $325 PO   
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Saint-Aubin 1er Cru 2015 $50 +545152 Vintages
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Aloxe Corton 2015 $60 +972240 Vintages
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Gevrey-Chambertin 2015 $60 +661330 July Classics
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Pommard 1er Cru 2015 $80 +129602 August Classics
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Le Corton Grand Cru Domaine 2016 $190 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Nuits St Georges les Cailles Domaine 1er Cru 2016 $160 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Pommard 1er Cru 2016 $99 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Gevrey Chambertin 2016 $74 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Corton Charlemagne Grand Cru Domaine 2016 $272 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Meursault Genevrieres Grand Cru Domaine 2016 $135 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Montagny 1er Cru 2016 $40 PO  **VALUE
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Beaune du Chateau 1er Cru Domaine 2016 $64 PO  -- another good value
-William Fevre Chablis Fourchaume 1er Cru 2016 $67 PO
 
***1/2 BETTER -- Three and a Half Stars (88 – 90 in Quality/Price Rating terms):
-William Fevre Chablis Champs Royaux 2016 $26 +461640 Vintages   **BEST VALUE
-William Fevre Chablis Bougros Grand Cru Domaine 2016 $105 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Beaune Clos de la Mousse 1er cru Monopole 2016 $83 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Beaune Greves Vigne Enfant Jesus 1er cru Monopole 2016 $163 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Monthelie les Duresses 1er Cru Domaine 2016 $59 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Volnay Caillerets Ancienne Cuvee Carnot 1er Cru Domaine 2016 $121 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Nuits-Saint-Georges 2016 $71 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Chevalier-Montrachet Grand Crus Domaine 2016 $505 PO
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Meursault Perrieres 1er Cru Domaine 2016 $147 PO (more mineral, less floral)
-Bouchard Pere & Fils Meursault les Clous Domaine Village 2016 $78 PO
 
The Food: oysters, charcuterie, cheeses, breads.
The Downside: I could not taste until near the end.
The Upside: I enjoyed the wine banter with Brian.
The Event: The annual Taste and Buy Preview of the latest (2016) vintage from Burgundy, hosted by Luc Bouchard and Woodman Wines.
The Event's Marketing Effectiveness and Execution (numerical grade): 92.
 

Sunday, July 1, 2018

SOME NEW BEVERAGE SAMPLES SENT TO ME FOR TASTING REVIEWS THIS MONTH –

1.Chateau des Charmes Aligote 2017 VQA Niagara-on-the-Lake, $15.95, +556951 LCBO: made from the rare French vinifera (seldom seen outside Burgundy) that Paul Bosc has cultivated since 1978, loaded with orchard fruit (apples and pears) and ending with a finishing crisp acidity suggesting food more than sipping. It was often used in Burgundy as the white wine base for Kir; now, almost any dry white is used for a Kir in North America. It's refreshing for summer, and is unoaked. 12.5% ABV. Quality/Price rating is 89 points by Dean Tudor of Gothic Epicures.
 
2.Chateau des Charmes Riesling 2017 VQA Niagara-on-the-Lake, $14.95, +3464 LCBO: it has been a long while since I last reviewed this wine in an earlier vintage. It's done up in stainless, slight and light honeyish citrus tones, but refreshing length. Good bones and flesh, off-dryish style (20gm/L residual sugar) that is also useful as a sipper. 10.6% ABV. Spiffy clear "riesling-shaped" bottle, twist top, clean effective and useful labels (both front and back). Quality/Price rating is 89 points by Dean Tudor of Gothic Epicures.
 
Chimo! www.deantudor.com