Showing posts with label wine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wine. Show all posts

Here's To Good Food: Cooking With Beer, Wine, Liquor & Liqueurs Review

Here's To Good Food: Cooking With Beer, Wine, Liquor and Liqueurs
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This fantastic cookbook contains delicious and healthy meals, it makes alcohol cooking fun and easy, just don't drink and cook, no complaint here !!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Here's To Good Food: Cooking With Beer, Wine, Liquor & Liqueurs



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Here's To Good Food: Cooking With Beer, Wine, Liquor & Liqueurs

Read More...

Sake: A Modern Guide Review

Sake:  A Modern Guide
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I've read many Sake guides over the years. Some leave me with lengthy, lengthy lists of sakes I'd like to try, if I could ever decipher the labels at my local Japanese liquor store. Most leave me even more confused than before I started reading. This book was the first I ever read where I walked away feeling like I could explain why I liked what I liked. But the best part of the book is the list of Sakes to try that are available in the US. Afterall, what's the point of a long list of exotic drinks to try if you're never going to be able to find them?

Click Here to see more reviews about: Sake: A Modern Guide

Sake is hot, hot, hot (though the best are actually served cold). It's the hippest sip at the cocktail hour and, as the sommeliers will tell you, can be a delicious accompaniment to food. This fun and informative guide demystifies an age-old wine and explains the many types of sake and how to properly taste their complex flavors. Beau Timken's foolproof TasteMatch system profiles 50 suggested sakes and provides their beer and wine flavor equivalents, creating a simple-yet-effective resource for finding a perfect match. Plus, recipes for 30 sake cocktails and 15 sake-friendly dishes make sake appropriate for any occasion (try a refreshing glass of Sake Sangria, or surprise guests by pairing sake with Fettuccine with Shiitake Mushrooms and Pancetta). There's even a section on planning and hosting a sake-tasting party to share your newfound sake expertise. A contemporary look at a traditional drink, Sake captures 1,000 years of culture and updates it for the modern lifestyle. Kanpai!

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Sake: A Modern Guide

Read More...

Wild Sweets: Exotic Desserts and Wine Pairings Review

Wild Sweets: Exotic Desserts and Wine Pairings
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
These two amazing chef have really done a master piece pastry book.
The perfect book as a coffee table book, the pictures are wild:)
The recipes are so good, and easy to make!
Enjoy!


Click Here to see more reviews about: Wild Sweets: Exotic Desserts and Wine Pairings

From their professional life as culinary educators, chocolatiers, and participants in world pastry competitions, Dominique and Cindy Duby have developed an innovative style of creating desserts and sweets based on exotic ingredients. In 75 elegant recipes, Wild Sweets explores new taste territory for dessert lovers and home cooks by incorporating unusual ingredients such as salmonberries, desert-flower honey, ice wine, and even wild rice, avocado, and black truffles. The book is lavishly illustrated with color and black-and-white photographs of the ingredients and the mouthwatering finished dishes.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Wild Sweets: Exotic Desserts and Wine Pairings

Read More...

Drink This: Wine Made Simple Review

Drink This: Wine Made Simple
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Years ago Dara wrote a food column with step-by-step instructions for learning the concept of "dry". Several friends and I had a blast (aided by 6 bottles of wine and as many beers) as we compared wines, beers, cheeses, fruits and crackers to get an in-depth understanding of dry. At the time, we wished Dara would do more of this type of writing. Now she has. I assembled my friends together again and we started with the Zinfandel chapter. As one friend said after the Zinfandel was gone, "I could have learned this in a class, but this was much more fun." It was also educational. By following Dara's instructions, I finally can taste pepper, cinnamon or blackberries in wine. We are already planning our next wine tasting party. Read This.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Drink This: Wine Made Simple



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about Drink This: Wine Made Simple

Read More...

The Wine Lover's Cookbook: Great Recipes for the Perfect Glass of Wine Review

The Wine Lover's Cookbook: Great Recipes for the Perfect Glass of Wine
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
What a remarkable discovery! It's one thing to find a book on wine, another to find a book on food, and something unheard of to find one book on both that so perfectly expresses the joys of marriage between food and beverage. This was a truly ingenious tome that belongs in every kitchen.
For those of you who are visually inclined, you might be a tad disappointed. Only some of the recipes include pictures. Still, considering the subject matter and the great plethora of facts, tidbits, and ideas, you are not missing out. Each type of wine (most if not all) is given a treatment, from a brief background, to what to expect in regards to flavors and aromas. From there, you are guided to the perfect food matches that complement and heighten those aspects of the wine (and vice versa).
Wine and food have long been enjoyed together. Sometimes, we miss out by not having the right wine with the right course. This is your guide, your Magellan for sailing the culinary world. I am so glad that I own this wonderful book. It made a great gift to me from a dear friend, I'm sure your friends would love a copy of it as well! A must-own!

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Wine Lover's Cookbook: Great Recipes for the Perfect Glass of Wine



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about The Wine Lover's Cookbook: Great Recipes for the Perfect Glass of Wine

Read More...

100 Perfect Pairings: Main Dishes to Enjoy with Wines You Love Review

100 Perfect Pairings: Main Dishes to Enjoy with Wines You Love
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
First pick from the whole book. Wonderful choice. Easy and wonderful. Paired it with Rex Goliath Pinto Nior and it worked beautifully! Going to pick out something each weekend to try! Wonderful book!!

Click Here to see more reviews about: 100 Perfect Pairings: Main Dishes to Enjoy with Wines You Love

A simple guide to matching main courses with easy-to-find wines
100 Perfect Pairings: Main Dishes to Enjoy with Wines You Love helps you prepare main dishes that will perfectly complement the wines of your choice. An ideal resource for both casual dinners and special occasions, this handy book presents 100 main dish recipes that pair deliciously with favorites like Chardonnay (Roast Chicken with Potatoes) and Merlot (Mixed Mushroom Pappardelle), as well as new varietals like Viognier (Lobster Tails with Vanilla Drawn Butter), and Syrah (Rib Eye Steaks with Green Olive Butter).
Organized into 12 chapters (six for white, six for red) and illustrated with 40 lush color photos, 100 Perfect Pairings makes it easy to match a variety of main dishes with your favorite wines.
Features 100 tempting recipes to suit many occasions from weekday dinners to celebration brunches
Offers simple pairing guidelines for white wines from Sauvignon Blanc to Gewürztraminer and red wines from Rosé to Cabernet Sauvignon
Packaged in a small format that's great for gift-giving and for taking with you when you shop for food and wine

Whether pairing with a white or red wine, these 100 delicious recipes offer exciting options that will make every meal an occasion to remember.Sample Recipes Bacon and Blue Cheese Burgers (Click for recipe)

Buy NowGet 35% OFF

Click here for more information about 100 Perfect Pairings: Main Dishes to Enjoy with Wines You Love

Read More...

The Gourmet's Guide to Cooking with Wine Review

The Gourmet's Guide to Cooking with Wine
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This book could be labeled enchanting. Absolutely enchanting. Cooking with wine is a nice technique for adding flavor to one's dishes. I use it pretty often, from my old dinner party standby, Beef bourguignon, to my wife's family recipe for spaghetti sauce (or, as they refer to it, "gravy"). This book expands my wine cooking horizons considerably.
The book begins with a warning from Julia Child: "If you put rot-gut in, you'll get rut-gut out." Only use wine in a recipe that you would drink yourself! The author notes that (Page 6) ". . .a nice wine will only enhance a dish, such as in a sauce whose flavors are intensified through reduction."
Some of the recipes in here I have made before, such as Beef Bourguignon, Coq au vin, Coquilles Saint Jacques, Chicken Piccata, and so on. But the recipes of these tried and true dishes are different enough from mine that I can experiment.
The book proceeds as follows:
Introduction. Here, we get a brief essay on cooking with wine, a listing of wines that are good for cooking, and how long it takes alcohol from the wine to burn off.
Appetizers and soups. Here are some nice examples of wine with appetizers and soups. Chablis Vichyssoise: An old favorite, Vichyssoise, gets some new life with two cups of Chablis. Or French Onion Soup Chardonnay. I don't much enjoy Chardonnay, but I can see how this would add a nice taste to French Onion Soup. Indeed, this recipe is different from the one that I have used, and "Vive la difference!" Then there is a recipe for a salad dressing, featuring 1/4 cup of sherry (Allison's House Dressing).
The Great European Classics. Here, we see a series of classic recipes and their use of wine. Already mentioned, Beef Bourguignon, Coquilles Saint Jacques, Coq au Vin (with white wine instead of red; an interesting change of pace). Other interesting classics mentioned in this section: Veal Marsala and Veal Oscar.
Beef, Veal, Pork, and Lamb. I enjoy Steak Diane a great deal. I have not made it in the past; I note that there is an array of recipes available. Here is a nice variation. The wine used? Madeira. Also, cognac (or brandy). I've tended to use a meatloaf recipe from "Joy of Cooking," but the one in this book will be my next meatloaf effort--Mom's Madeira Meatloaf with Cremini Gravy. The meatloaf has standard ingredients--plus the Madeira. The gravy features cremini or portobello mushrooms with, you guessed it, more Madeira.
There follows sections on Poultry, Seafood, Pasta, Side dishes, and Brunch.
Great pictures of the dishes. The instructions, for the most part, are straightforward. A good concept lies at the heart of this volume and that concept is executed well.


Click Here to see more reviews about: The Gourmet's Guide to Cooking with Wine



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about The Gourmet's Guide to Cooking with Wine

Read More...

The Barcelona Cookbook: A Celebration of Food, Wine, and Life Review

The Barcelona Cookbook: A Celebration of Food, Wine, and Life
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
We (my wife and I) collect cookbooks for many reasons, but you know you've hit the jackpot when a certain book is simultaneously fun to read with great stories; sprinkled with useful tips and hints throughout; contains photos that make you want to pluck the food off the pages to eat; inspires you; and, oh by the way, is full of delicious recipes that do not require a degree from Le Cordon Bleu or the Culinary Institute of America to prepare.
First and foremost, we think for a cookbook to deserve a decent rating, the recipes have to work. Everything we've tried has been scrumptious thus far. Each recipe is well laid out, starting with a short introduction on the dish. Ingredients for the recipe follow and are listed logically. Easy to understand steps that make sense for any average home cook follow the ingredients.
If your mouth is not watering by the time you're done reading the recipe for "Sherry-Braised Short Ribs with Autumn Vegetables" that starts on page 95, you may not have a pulse. Even someone who can barely boil water should be able to follow the recipe for "Albondigas" (Spanish for meatballs in tomato sauce) on page 110 and easily make succulent meatballs worthy of serving to any guest. The "Roasted Beets with Cabrales and Toasted Walnuts" cold tapas on page 31 is simplicity itself, but with a "secret" trick (using a certain type of vinegar to accentuate the beets) that make the dish transcendent. I could go on and on and on.
Beyond the well laid out recipes that work, the anecdotes in the book such as "The Meat Guy" (starting on page 158) are amusing and fun to read. We don't know this meat guy, Mark Berlin, but after reading about him, we know we want to meet him someday and get our meat from him.
Whether you cook or not, if you love food, this is a great book and a must have!

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Barcelona Cookbook: A Celebration of Food, Wine, and Life



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about The Barcelona Cookbook: A Celebration of Food, Wine, and Life

Read More...

What to Drink with What You Eat: The Definitive Guide to Pairing Food with Wine, Beer, Spirits, Coffee, Tea - Even Water - Based on Expert Advice from America's Best Sommeliers Review

What to Drink with What You Eat: The Definitive Guide to Pairing Food with Wine, Beer, Spirits, Coffee, Tea - Even Water - Based on Expert Advice from America's Best Sommeliers
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
(3 1/2 stars)
After reading the slew of five-star reviews for this volume, today I drove to Barnes & Noble fully ready to purchase it. After spending a fair amount of time in the aisle surveying its contents, I ended up not getting it, and thought I would explain why not for the sake of those Amazon readers whose considerations might be similar to my own.
I think the issues of relevance are 'who you are' and what you're looking for in a book like this. I certainly understand why great wine aficionados (presumably with money and time), critics, sommeliers, restaurateurs and the like would desire and benefit from a work of such sophistication and scope. But for the hobbyist (like myself), it was just too much. A little 'highbrow' for me -- and I suspect I'm not alone. I didn't find it nearly as accessible as, for example, Karen MacNeil's Wine, Food, and Friends (which I bought). MacNeil's book has a seasonal presentation, and, while evidencing an expert's range of knowledge, seeks not to lose sight of practical concerns (such as $$). In a nutshell, What To Drink . . . has a more encyclopedic approach (and does include beverages beyond wine), while MacNeil's is user-friendly and more what I was looking for. I wish it were possible to buy chapters 5 & 6 of Dornenburg & Page's book separately, because they comprise a tremendous resource for ongoing reference. The one surprise regarding Dornenburg & Page was that in a product of such erudition, it lacked an index.
So, bearing in mind the two questions I started with, I hope some of these thoughts will be helpful in informing your purchasing decision.

Click Here to see more reviews about: What to Drink with What You Eat: The Definitive Guide to Pairing Food with Wine, Beer, Spirits, Coffee, Tea - Even Water - Based on Expert Advice from America's Best Sommeliers



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about What to Drink with What You Eat: The Definitive Guide to Pairing Food with Wine, Beer, Spirits, Coffee, Tea - Even Water - Based on Expert Advice from America's Best Sommeliers

Read More...

Making Wild Wines & Meads: 125 Unusual Recipes Using Herbs, Fruits, Flowers & More Review

Making Wild Wines and Meads: 125 Unusual Recipes Using Herbs, Fruits, Flowers and More
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
From the novice vinter to a more experienced hand, this book is one of the better ones I have seen. At the start, the author describes and explains the homewine-making process, the equiptment necessary, the "lingo", and gives a desent time-line for completion. The recipies are usually simple and are for one-gallon batches. Some are a little weird, but it does say "unusual" in the title. A definate recommendation for anyone who is avidly homebrewing wine or mead.
Wassail!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Making Wild Wines & Meads: 125 Unusual Recipes Using Herbs, Fruits, Flowers & More

Make Extraordinary Homemade Wines from Everything but Grapes! Exotic wines, honey meads, spicy metheglins, and fruity melomels-there's no end to the great-tasting elixirs you can make using ingredients from your local market and even your own backyard! You'll find easy, step-by-step winemaking instructions plus memorable recipes, including: Apricot Wine, Dry Mead, Marigold Wine, Almond Wine, Cherry Melomel, Cranberry Claret, Pea Pod Wine, Lemon-Thyme Metleglin, Strawberry Wine, and Rose Hip Melomel

Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about Making Wild Wines & Meads: 125 Unusual Recipes Using Herbs, Fruits, Flowers & More

Read More...