Archive for the 'Books' Category

09
Mar
12

Best Wine Apps – Wine Picks and Pairings: Natalie MacLean

In the latest in our series of wine apps, here is one I use all the time.

Ever wondered what to match with beef, pork, chicken, fish and so on. Well, if you have a smartphone, there’s an app for that as they say !

Say hello to Wine Picks & Pairings: Natalie MacLean

So what can you do with it ?

The big one for me is (obviously) food and wine matching. You can start with the food or the wine and work out the best pairing from there. Quick, fun and simple !

In addition you can . . . . . .

  • snap a picture of a bottle bar code with your smartphone
  • get professional tasting notes, scores, pairings and recipes
  • search 150,000 wines available
  • add wines to your virtual cellar with just a few clicks
  • share your wines and pairings on Twitter and Facebook

And best of all, its free.

I am a big fan of Natalie, having read two of her wonderful wine books. Well worth checking out too. Packed full of great stories and written in an engaging style !

30
Aug
11

5 Wine Books To Get You Started

Just getting into wine ? Into wine but want to read up on this wonderful subject.

Here are 5 general wine books that will get you started

Let Me Tell You About Wine by Oz Clarke

You don’t need to know all about wine regions or how wine is made to choose wine with confidence. If you like the sound of intense, blackcurranty reds or aromatic whites, this book will tell you how to find these flavors in the wines you buy, regardless of whether the wine is labeled by grape variety or by country. Drinking wine is all about enjoyment. Oz explains how to get maximum enjoyment out of every bottle you buy, from dealing with broken corks, to learning basic tasting techniques, spotting faulty wine, and matching food and wine, whether at home or in a restaurant. In Oz’s down-to-earth guide to all the world’s major wine regions you’ll find everything you need to know to navigate your way round a wine shop or wine website. Oz explores grape varieties, flavors and styles, giving equal consideration to classic wine regions – such as Bordeaux and Chianti – and the newer wine-producing countries such as New Zealand, Australia, Chile and Argentina. Do vintages matter? Are the wines good value for money? Oz tells you everything you really need to know. Gradually building your knowledge with expert tips, information boxes and wines to try, this is a complete guide for the beginner wine enthusiast.

The Wine Bible by Karen MacNeil

THE WINE BIBLE is like a lively course from an expert teacher, grounded deeply in the fundamentals and enriched with passionate opinions, asides, tips, anecdotes, definitions, glossaries, illustrations, maps, photos, charts, and wine labels – everything, in fact, but the actual bottle of wine itself. Beginning with the basics of mastering wine – how to taste with focus and build a wine-tasting memory, understanding the subtle interplay of variety, vineyard, and vintner, and demystifying the issue of vintages – it covers the essentials. The emotion and intigue of Burgundy. Rhone’s untamed reds. The flinty pleasures of sauvignon blanc and suprising delicacy of Spain’s Riojas. Bordeaux, the largest fine-wine vineyard on the globe and epitome of terroir. Fourteen Sonoma wines to know. The importance of finish. Tuscany, kingdom of variable microclimates. The precise and food-friendly wines of Germany. The narrow 30-mile stretch of ambition, experimentation, and surpassing quality called Napa. Why the “punt,” or indentation, in a wine bottle. Australia, where cutting-edge technology meets easy, outgoing, unpretentious character. Plus Austria, New Zealand, South Africa, Portugal, and more.

Hugh Johnson’s Wine Companion: The Encyclopedia of Wines, Vineyards and Winemakers by Hugh Johnson / Stephen Brooke

“Hugh Johnson’s Wine Companion” presents a unique approach to wine and wine producers, combining detailed background information with practical advice on how to enjoy wine to the full. Already praised for its wealth of information, the book has been extensively revised and updated by Stephen Brook, with over 70 per cent of the content changed, to take account of the latest developments in the fast-changing world of wine, be they human, cultural, or geographic. Colour maps and photographs and detailed glossaries of the wines of each region are just two of the additions for this exciting new edition.

The World Atlas of Wine by Jancis Robinson / Hugh Johnson

Written by the world’s most authoritative wine duo, the unparalleled clarity and detail of the maps remain core to the Atlas. Each of the 200 maps has been thoroughly researched and updated. Reflecting the happenings over the last six years in the world of wine, the pages devoted to the New World show a lot of changes. New additions include: California (Rutherford, Oakville, Stag’s Leap),Australia (Barossa Valley, McLaren Vale, Limestone Coast), New Zealand (Central Otago, Martinborough), South Africa (Constantia). The South American section receives a complete revamp. In Europe the dynamism of the new Old World is in evidence, with Sicily, the Douro, Greece and Germany all receiving extra pages. In Spain, Toro makes an appearance and Austria’s hotspots, Wachau & Kremstel, fall under the spotlight. With new illustrations and photographs throughout, this is the must-have book and reference work for all wine enthusiasts.

The Oxford Companion to Wine by Jancis Robinson et al

Jancis Robinson publishes a new edition of her acclaimed Oxford Companion to Wine, coming as close as anybody is likely to in achieving the unachievable goal of a detailed, comprehensive, single-volume work of reference covering the whole world of wines. Just how daunting the task of keeping up with the now practically supersonic pace of development in many areas of the wine industry must be is indicated by the need, only five years after the first edition, to issue another with updated versions of about half the 3,000 entries. It is an awesome achievement. Wine is now a modern, global industry: Jancis Robinson and her team of contributors require–and deliver–expertise in a really astonishing range of disciplines.

Available from all good bookstores. Summary of books thanks to www.amazon.co.uk

04
Feb
11

The Oxford Companion To Wine. Epic !

The Oxford Companion to Wine by Jancis Robinson is my “go to” wine book. You name it, if its wine related, its in there. Wine styles, regions, grape varieties, technical wine terms, personalities and pretty much everything else to do with wine, you will find it in this awesome book. If its not in there, you probably dont need to know it.

There is not a single day goes by that I dont check something in it. I always find the answers to my questions.

Its arranged alphabetically and has an in-depth cross reference format. There are contributions from 167 wine experts / writers and more Masters of Wine than you can shake a corkscrew at.

It really is the ultimate wine reference book and should be part of every wine lovers collection in my humble opinion.

14
Jan
11

Matt Skinner’s Heard It Through The Grapevine

In the latest of our wine book videos, we look at the very entertaining introduction to wine book “Heard It Through The Grapevine” by Matt Skinner. Best mates with Jamie Olivier, the man from Down Under writes in a very relaxed fashion. For the casual wine reader or anyone just getting into wine, this is a no nonsense enjoyable read that covers a lot of the basics.

In order to be in for the draw for a free copy of this book, just leave a comment below answering the following question . . . .

Whats your favourite shop for wine in Ireland ?

We’ll do the draw in a few days time and send the book by courier to the lucky winner anywhere in the Republic of Ireland.

10
Dec
10

Oz Clarke’s Wine Atlas

In the first of our series on wine books, we look at the wonderful Oz Clarke’s Wine Atlas. Its a beautiful book with lovely writing, stunning photography and some of the nicest wine region maps you are ever likely to see. So the next time you are having a glass of say, Wine By Brad Semillon Sauvignon, you can flick to the section on Margaret River and see where this delicious wine is from.

I’ll be the first to put my hand up and admit that I am a book lover. When it comes to combining books and my passion for wine, it results in a lot of wine books on my shelf ! People have been asking me more and more about some reading material as their personal interest in wine grows. I know it was from reading various wine titles that my wine horizons expanded. In fact it lead me to do professional study through the Wine & Spirit Educational Trust.

Hope you enjoy the video. We are not doing book reviews as such. Its just an overview of wine books that may be of interest to you. We will cover a cross section of titles from general wine interest to specific regions, countries, wines, biographies and even some fiction. We might even throw in some wine DVD suggestions along the way.

Happy reading




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