Category Archives: Book Reviews

Three Wine Books for Christmas

Three Wine Books for Christmas

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With all the new books that have come out in 2012, I wanted to take a look down memory lane and remind us all of the books of Christmases past. This is a trio of wine books that are about the stories than they are about facts, numbers, and data. They are books that will make you fall a little bit more in love with wine, and that’s important. You’ll always have time to learn about the next new wine region or that grape you just can’t pronounce, but snuggling up by the fire over the holidays calls for a good story.

At the top of the list is Kermit Lynch’s Adventures on the Wine Route: A Wine Buyer’s Tour of France. This “recounting of his experiences on the wine route and in the wine cellars of France through the Loire, Bordeaux, the Languedoc, Provence, Northern and Southern Rhone, and the Cote d’Oris inspiring and returns my faith in vino-sapiens (as Cuvee Corner’s Bill Eye calls use). This is a delightful read that I can go back to year after year, and perfect for any wine lover.

This is a book I’m reading right now, Wine and War: The French, the Nazis, and the Battle for France’s Greatest Treasure. A great narrative and insight into a monumental piece of micro-history in French winemaking. More for the history buffs among us.

Reflections of a Wine Merchant rounds out this trio. In it, Neal Rosenthal (the wine merchant the title suggests) tells stories about his travels through the cellars, vineyards, and homes of French vignerons. Though it lacks the emotional resonance of Lynch’s book, I found it thoroughly pulled me in.

These books have brought boat loads of joy and cheer to dreary commutes and quiet days in between the sips and swirls that mark our wine lives, and I hope you will enjoy them too. Wishing you all happy holidays!

How to Love Wine by Eric Asimov

How to Love Wine by Eric Asimov

Eric Asimov’s new book How To Love Wine: A Memoir and Manifesto is garnering accolades from all corners of wine geekdom. And it is all very deserved. In his book, Asimov discusses his own personal experience with wines, and how the pleasure of wine came for him before knowledge. So with that in mind, it won’t come as a surprise that he advocates that performance anxiety shouldn’t be the issue it has become for so many would-be wine lovers. He also takes on the entrenched use wine flowery tasting notes and wine scores, and it should be said that it is in fact quite sad to see everyone on wine-searcher chirping in with a number without thought, to begin with, even for the very basic consideration of what food the wine would best pair with. At Wineshout weve never been about numbering wines and have trouble understanding the logic behind the number, though it’s understandable why scoring has found its place.

But don’t just listen to us. here’s what Mr. Asimov himself says about his book in the Daily Beast.

The Palate Press dubbed it a very very sensible book.

Alice Feiring kept on thinking of the word sweet when thinking about the book, and has a great write-up about her thoughts on the book.

Chris Kissack aka The Wine Doctor said “I can only recommend you read Eric’s book. It will explain all. And it comes with my thorough endorsement.”

Books: A Toast to Bargain Wines

Books: A Toast to Bargain Wines

With too many wine books and publications fetishizing first growths and California cult cabs, George M. Taber‘s A Toast to Bargain Wines: How Innovators, Iconoclasts, and Winemaking Revolutionaries Are Changing the Way the World Drinks offers the more novice wine fans among us a different look at the world of wine. But there’s more here than just wisdom for beginners. The history in these pages is intriguing and at times dastardly, making this book, or even parts of it, an enjoyable read for even the more seasoned winos among us.

Taber, author of the critically acclaimed Judgment of Paris: California vs. France and the Historic 1976 Paris Tasting That Revolutionized Wine, does a solid job of revealing interesting bits of history behind some of the most successful bargain wine brands, and the development of regions, and perhaps in the case of China, regions soon to be, known for bargain wines.

I relished the colored past of the Bronco Wine Company, the winery behind that familiar Two Buck Chuck of Trader Joe’s fame, and founder Fred Franzia as well as the underdog tale of the rise of [yellowtail] through adversity and up against the giants. If you think of this Aussie brand as a giant dealer of cheap swill, look again at its roots and the success it has achieved not only among the masses but also with wine critics.

But what really had me tweeting, thinking and wondering was the world of wine contests. This stage of gold medals and awards is a mysterious game without any hard and fast rules. other than that it is all just a matter of taste. Made me think twice about the gold medal badges I see on bottlenecks – what contest did it come from? Who awarded the medal, a professional wine critic or a joe regular to whom Little Penguin is a luxury?

Though Taber’s actual list of recommended bargain wines is limited, his briefs on the histories and bios of the wineries behind these labels is a nice touch. And in looking at his recommendations, opinions – including mine – vary greatly on the wines he has recommended, it’s important to return to that same thought as above – it’s all just a matter of taste. What is Taber’s prized bargain find is another man’s bad memory.

A Toast to Bargain Wines is essential reading for those uninitiated in wine history and wanting to get a peek behind the curtain of the wine business. Taber binds it all together with colorful prose that made this enjoyable quiet time away from the daily grind of sipping and spitting.

PS. Taber’s book names in their entirity sure are a mouthful.