The wine bible

Karen MacNeil, 1954-

Book - 2015

A lively course from an expert teacher, The Wine Bible grounds the reader deeply in the fundamentals while layering on informative asides, tips, amusing anecdotes, definitions, glossaries, photos, maps, labels, and recommended bottles. Karen MacNeil's information comes directly through primary research; for this second edition she has tasted more than 10,000 wines and visited dozens of wine regions around the world. New to the book are wines of China, Japan, Mexico, and Slovenia.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Workman Publishing [2015]
©2015
Language
English
Main Author
Karen MacNeil, 1954- (author)
Edition
Revised second edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xii, 996 pages : illustrations (some color), maps (some color) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780761185727
9780761180838
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

Multiaward-winning writer MacNeil (Wine, Food & Friends) here updates her comprehensive exploration of wine. She starts with the basics (grape varietals, production methods, food pairings) before traversing the world. France comes first (and at greatest length), as is usual in wine books, while a brief section on Asian producers (India, Japan, China) concludes the journey. The volume is not exhaustive-while Mexican wine is covered in a four-page section, there are curious omissions such as Lebanon, Algeria, Croatia, and Romania. Maps and illustrations add helpful detail, particularly in showing labels from recommended producers. MacNeil's prose is enlightening yet breezy, and the many sidebars provide terrific nuggets of supplementary and sometimes curious information. VERDICT Straddling the line between reference resource and leisure read, this guide merits a home in many libraries. Recommended where wine is a topic of interest.-Peter Hepburn, Coll. of the Canyons Lib., Santa Clarita, CA © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

INTRODUCTION WHY WINE MATTERS During the ten years it took to write the first edition of The Wine Bible and the four years it took to write this second edition, I have often asked myself why wine matters. What is it about wine that I hold so deeply? What is this endless attachment? I have always known what it is not. It's not about scoring or competitive analysis, though like any wine pro, I'm game for the next blind tasting. And it's not about the need to retell what I have learned, though I can lie awake for hours thinking about how to capture a wine in words. Perhaps it is this: I love wine because it is one of the last true things. In a world digitized to distraction, a world where you can't get out of your pajamas without your cell phone, wine remains utterly primary. Unrushed. The silent music of nature. For eight thousand years, vines clutching the earth have thrust themselves upward toward the sun and given us juicy berries, and ultimately wine. In every sip taken in the present, we drink in the past--the moment in time when those berries were picked; a moment gone but recaptured--and so vivid that our bond with nature is welded deep. Wine matters because of this ineluctable connection. Wine and food cradle us in our own communal humanity. Anthropologically, they are the pleasures that carried life forward and sustained us through the sometimes dark days of our own evolution. Drinking wine then--as small as that action can seem--is both grounding and transformative. It reminds us of other things that matter, too: love, friendship, generosity. The Wine Bible has taken me a long time to write--in some ways I've spent the better part of my last twenty years on it. It has taken this long not because it takes a long time to accumulate the facts, but because it takes a long time to feel a place--culturally, historically, aesthetically. And so, on my mission to understand the wine regions of the world, I've danced the tango (awkwardly) with Argentinian men to try to understand malbec; drunk amarone while eating horsemeat (a tradition) in the Veneto; sipped wine from hairy goatskin bags in northern Greece (much as the ancients would have); and been strapped into a contraption that lowers pickers down into perilously steep German vineyards (an experience that momentarily convinces you your life is over). I've shared wine and cigars with bullfighters in Rioja; ridden through the vineyards of Texas on horseback; eaten octopus and drunk assyrtiko with Greek fishermen in Santorini (considered by some to be the lost Atlantis); and picked tiny oyster shells from among the fossilized sea creatures that make up the moonscape soils of Chablis. I've waltzed among wine barrels with winemakers in Vienna; stomped grapes with Portuguese picking crews until my legs were purple, and worked for weeks with a Mexican harvest crew in California, one of the hardest and most rewarding experiences I've ever had. These encounters brought wine so vividly into my life that I ultimately moved to Napa Valley on the sheer belief that living near vines would touch my heart in ways imaginable and not. And so it has. --Karen MacNeil Excerpted from The Wine Bible by Karen MacNeil All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.