Fear of Wine: An Introductory Guide to the Grape - Softcover

Brenner, Leslie

 
9780553374643: Fear of Wine: An Introductory Guide to the Grape

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In this friendly introductory guide, food and wine writer Leslie Brenner tells how to:
Pour and taste wine
Develop a taste memory
Order from a wine list
Select a wine at the store
Match food with wine

In addition, helpful sidebars illuminate such subjects as:
How--and why--to swirl without sloshing
Disarming a snotty waiter
Ten great wines to bring to a dinner party
Going beyond California Chardonnay
Starting your own cellar for under $100

Along the way, Lettie Teague's funny and informative cartoons enhance the text and make great devices for remembering the most important facts. Before long,
your old standby, Chateau Screwtop, will be a distant memory. Accessible and concise, Fear of Wine will appeal to anyone who wants to know a little bit about a subject that can bring great pleasure.

At last, a guide that is as fun to read as wine is to drink!

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Leslie Brenner, the self-taught cook and award-winning cookbook author, is a restaurant critic and dining editor at The Dallas Morning News. Formerly the editor of the Los Angeles Times Food section and contributing editor at Travel + Leisure magazine, it is no surprise that Brenner has a passion for excellent cooking and dining. Over the years, she has been awarded two James Beard Foundation Journalism Awards, countless first prizes from the Association of Food Journalists, and has received two first place prizes in "Comment and Criticism" from the Texas Associated Press Managing Editors.

Lettie Teague is a staff writer and wine columnist for The Wall Street Journal. The author of Wine in Words: Notes for Better Drinking, she is the recipient of three James Beard Foundation Awards, and has been honored with an induction into the Wine Media Guild’s Wine Writers’ Hall of Fame.

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Opening Champagne and Other Sparkling Wine

Opening a bottle of champagne or sparkling wine (a bottle of "bubbles," as they say in the California wine trade...) obviously requires an entirely different technique than still wines.  This is because the carbon dioxide bubbles in the wine cause tremendous pressure to build up in the bottle, and if you're not careful, the cork  an fly out dangerously.  (You could put an eye out that way!)

Opening a bottle of champagne frightens lots of people, too, but it's really quite easy.

First, remove the foil.

Next, being careful not to point the cork toward anyone, twist the loop on the wire cage until it is disengaged.  Carefully remove the cage.  

Grasp the cork with one hand, keeping the hand over the cork to prevent it from flying out while you use the other hand to twist the bottle gently but firmly until it's opened.  There won't be a loud pop, but hey--there's not supposed to be! You should hear just a gentle little "phssht" sound.

Pour about an inch of wine into each glass, and then go back and fill them up. This technique prevents them from bubbling over.

Cheers!


Wines to Bring to a Dinner Party

Impressive and interesting wines to bring to dinner that won't break the bank:

Albari±o from Spain
Vin Santo from Italy
Monbazillac
Alsatian Riesling
New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc
Muscat de Beaumes-de-Venise
ChÔteauneuf-du-Pape
Crozes-Hermitage
Ribera del Duero
Single-quinta port

Or consider one of these particular bottles from California:

Scharffenberger Brut, Blanc de Blanc, or Brut RosÚ
Domaine Chandon Etoile or Brut
Mumm Napa CuvÚe Napa
Au Bon Climat Chardonnay
Calera Pinot Noir
Chalone Pinot Noir
Bonny Don Vin de GlaciÞre
Preston Muscat Br¹lÚ

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