James Chappel’s thought-provoking Golden Years offers strategies to understand and address the needs of America’s aging population.
James Chappel’s thought-provoking Golden Years offers strategies to understand and address the needs of America’s aging population.
Jonathan D. Katz’s About Face celebrates the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall uprising with deep scholarship and thrilling artworks.
Jonathan D. Katz’s About Face celebrates the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall uprising with deep scholarship and thrilling artworks.
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Prince Alain de Polignac, a direct descendant of Madame Pommery and winemaker at his family’s Champagne estate, believes women are better tasters than men that they have more direct access to sensory impressions and the 2001 class of wine books indicates that women write with more intuition as well.

Karen MacNeil’s The Wine Bible is just my kind of book: a little history, a little science, a little practical advice and a fair amount of (quite comprehensible) tasting flourish. The heavy paperback begins with the basics of winemaking, varietals and tasting how-to’s, and then is divided by country into chapters that, while covering important wines, labels and styles, are more like conversations with a tolerant and funny professor who also happens to cook a great dinner for the grad students. MacNeil, director of the wine program at the Culinary Institute of America’s Napa Valley, is remarkably well-versed; she has an easy manner with information and flavor, mixing entries on whether to "age" wines and bits of food pairing advice. You could start at the beginning, but browsing will be just as much fun. A fine all-round reference.

Sunday (London) Times writer Joanna Simon definitely shoots from the lip, and her deceptively breezy and brightly illustrated book, Wine: An Introduction takes the same approach the smart new wine shops are promoting: defining grape varietals by flavor, suggesting similar styles for experimentation (if you like this, try that); and moving through hints on food and wine compatibility before touching on regions, buying and storage tips. A very nice choice for those who might like to start a small personal cellar or tasting circle.

Master of Wine Jancis Robinson, who edited the comprehensive and almost pedantic Oxford Companion to Wine (one of last year’s picks), has this year produced the much more informal How to Taste: A Guide to Enjoying Wine. As the name suggests, this is a handbook to getting the most out of wine, and meals, set up as a beginner’s course but extending through intermediate to confident amateur. Robinson spends little time on specific producers, concentrating on regions and styles, but she cleverly divides "theory" from "practice," which may make some techno-phobes relax, and similarly makes the concept of tasting, even hosting blind tastings, intriguing rather than intimidating.

Even some of the wine "guys" are getting a little more in touch with their feelings these days. The third edition of Tom Stevenson’s The New Sotheby’s Wine Encyclopedia, for instance, is more straightforward than MacNeil’s primer but may be more useful for those primarily concerned with specific producers and their styles. Stevenson also goes through a no-nonsense but useful explanation of tasting criteria and oenology basics before moving to the major winemaking regions, which he sums up crisply and, for all but the more pretentious jargonist, completely. He has additional thumbnail descriptions of his picks from each region, and is still the only critic (to my knowledge) to recognize the fine Bordeaux-style Chateau Lumiere reds from Japanese winemaker Toshihiko Tsukamoto.

Beyond all the fermentation diagrams, topographical comparisons, historical factoids and tasting charts, the second edition of Exploring Wine: The Culinary Institute of America’s Complete Guide to Wines of the World, written by three (male) wine educators at the CIA, has a list of food and wine pairings so specific that it covers rumaki, veggie burgers, eggs Benedict and huevos rancheros. This is an admirably complete volume but perhaps too much for the ordinary drinker who may be put off by its encyclopedia-like flatness.

Eve Zibart is the restaurant critic for the Weekend section of The Washington Post and author of The Ethnic Food Lover’s Companion (Menasha Ridge).

 

Prince Alain de Polignac, a direct descendant of Madame Pommery and winemaker at his family's Champagne estate, believes women are better tasters than men that they have more direct access to sensory impressions and the 2001 class of wine books indicates that women write…

Review by

Prince Alain de Polignac, a direct descendant of Madame Pommery and winemaker at his family’s Champagne estate, believes women are better tasters than men that they have more direct access to sensory impressions and the 2001 class of wine books indicates that women write with more intuition as well.

Karen MacNeil’s The Wine Bible is just my kind of book: a little history, a little science, a little practical advice and a fair amount of (quite comprehensible) tasting flourish. The heavy paperback begins with the basics of winemaking, varietals and tasting how-to’s, and then is divided by country into chapters that, while covering important wines, labels and styles, are more like conversations with a tolerant and funny professor who also happens to cook a great dinner for the grad students. MacNeil, director of the wine program at the Culinary Institute of America’s Napa Valley, is remarkably well-versed; she has an easy manner with information and flavor, mixing entries on whether to "age" wines and bits of food pairing advice. You could start at the beginning, but browsing will be just as much fun. A fine all-round reference.

Sunday (London) Times writer Joanna Simon definitely shoots from the lip, and her deceptively breezy and brightly illustrated book, Wine: An Introduction takes the same approach the smart new wine shops are promoting: defining grape varietals by flavor, suggesting similar styles for experimentation (if you like this, try that); and moving through hints on food and wine compatibility before touching on regions, buying and storage tips. A very nice choice for those who might like to start a small personal cellar or tasting circle.

Master of Wine Jancis Robinson, who edited the comprehensive and almost pedantic Oxford Companion to Wine (one of last year’s picks), has this year produced the much more informal How to Taste: A Guide to Enjoying Wine. As the name suggests, this is a handbook to getting the most out of wine, and meals, set up as a beginner’s course but extending through intermediate to confident amateur. Robinson spends little time on specific producers, concentrating on regions and styles, but she cleverly divides "theory" from "practice," which may make some techno-phobes relax, and similarly makes the concept of tasting, even hosting blind tastings, intriguing rather than intimidating.

Even some of the wine "guys" are getting a little more in touch with their feelings these days. The third edition of Tom Stevenson’s The New Sotheby’s Wine Encyclopedia, for instance, is more straightforward than MacNeil’s primer but may be more useful for those primarily concerned with specific producers and their styles. Stevenson also goes through a no-nonsense but useful explanation of tasting criteria and oenology basics before moving to the major winemaking regions, which he sums up crisply and, for all but the more pretentious jargonist, completely. He has additional thumbnail descriptions of his picks from each region, and is still the only critic (to my knowledge) to recognize the fine Bordeaux-style Chateau Lumiere reds from Japanese winemaker Toshihiko Tsukamoto.

Beyond all the fermentation diagrams, topographical comparisons, historical factoids and tasting charts, the second edition of Exploring Wine: The Culinary Institute of America’s Complete Guide to Wines of the World, written by three (male) wine educators at the CIA, has a list of food and wine pairings so specific that it covers rumaki, veggie burgers, eggs Benedict and huevos rancheros. This is an admirably complete volume but perhaps too much for the ordinary drinker who may be put off by its encyclopedia-like flatness.

Eve Zibart is the restaurant critic for the Weekend section of The Washington Post and author of The Ethnic Food Lover’s Companion (Menasha Ridge).

 

Prince Alain de Polignac, a direct descendant of Madame Pommery and winemaker at his family's Champagne estate, believes women are better tasters than men that they have more direct access to sensory impressions and the 2001 class of wine books indicates that women write with…

Review by

Prince Alain de Polignac, a direct descendant of Madame Pommery and winemaker at his family’s Champagne estate, believes women are better tasters than men that they have more direct access to sensory impressions and the 2001 class of wine books indicates that women write with more intuition as well.

Karen MacNeil’s The Wine Bible is just my kind of book: a little history, a little science, a little practical advice and a fair amount of (quite comprehensible) tasting flourish. The heavy paperback begins with the basics of winemaking, varietals and tasting how-to’s, and then is divided by country into chapters that, while covering important wines, labels and styles, are more like conversations with a tolerant and funny professor who also happens to cook a great dinner for the grad students. MacNeil, director of the wine program at the Culinary Institute of America’s Napa Valley, is remarkably well-versed; she has an easy manner with information and flavor, mixing entries on whether to "age" wines and bits of food pairing advice. You could start at the beginning, but browsing will be just as much fun. A fine all-round reference.

Sunday (London) Times writer Joanna Simon definitely shoots from the lip, and her deceptively breezy and brightly illustrated book, Wine: An Introduction takes the same approach the smart new wine shops are promoting: defining grape varietals by flavor, suggesting similar styles for experimentation (if you like this, try that); and moving through hints on food and wine compatibility before touching on regions, buying and storage tips. A very nice choice for those who might like to start a small personal cellar or tasting circle.

Master of Wine Jancis Robinson, who edited the comprehensive and almost pedantic Oxford Companion to Wine (one of last year’s picks), has this year produced the much more informal How to Taste: A Guide to Enjoying Wine. As the name suggests, this is a handbook to getting the most out of wine, and meals, set up as a beginner’s course but extending through intermediate to confident amateur. Robinson spends little time on specific producers, concentrating on regions and styles, but she cleverly divides "theory" from "practice," which may make some techno-phobes relax, and similarly makes the concept of tasting, even hosting blind tastings, intriguing rather than intimidating.

Even some of the wine "guys" are getting a little more in touch with their feelings these days. The third edition of Tom Stevenson’s The New Sotheby’s Wine Encyclopedia, for instance, is more straightforward than MacNeil’s primer but may be more useful for those primarily concerned with specific producers and their styles. Stevenson also goes through a no-nonsense but useful explanation of tasting criteria and oenology basics before moving to the major winemaking regions, which he sums up crisply and, for all but the more pretentious jargonist, completely. He has additional thumbnail descriptions of his picks from each region, and is still the only critic (to my knowledge) to recognize the fine Bordeaux-style Chateau Lumiere reds from Japanese winemaker Toshihiko Tsukamoto.

Beyond all the fermentation diagrams, topographical comparisons, historical factoids and tasting charts, the second edition of Exploring Wine: The Culinary Institute of America’s Complete Guide to Wines of the World, written by three (male) wine educators at the CIA, has a list of food and wine pairings so specific that it covers rumaki, veggie burgers, eggs Benedict and huevos rancheros. This is an admirably complete volume but perhaps too much for the ordinary drinker who may be put off by its encyclopedia-like flatness.

Eve Zibart is the restaurant critic for the Weekend section of The Washington Post and author of The Ethnic Food Lover’s Companion (Menasha Ridge).

 

Prince Alain de Polignac, a direct descendant of Madame Pommery and winemaker at his family's Champagne estate, believes women are better tasters than men that they have more direct access to sensory impressions and the 2001 class of wine books indicates that women write…

Review by

Daydreaming may seem a little self-indulgent in these difficult times, but curling up with a glossy book on a dreary November day may be just the catalyst you need to re-envision and revitalize your home. Without these dreams, and the designing and redecorating that follow, American homes would not be what they are: welcoming, comfortable places, full of the fragrance of good food cooking on the stove mingled with the sound of healthy debate in the air. Homes where antiques and air mattresses somehow go together.

American homes have become eclectic combinations of functionality, beauty, whimsy, technology and tradition. The season’s best home decorating books discuss planning and designing interior spaces, but they also capture that indomitable, contagious American spirit that is reflected in our individual dwellings our own sweet homes.

Mary Carol Garrity, author of Nell Hill’s Style at Home, is an example of American vivacity and success in her own right. Garrity followed her dream and defied the odds; she transformed an old bank building in the small Midwestern town of Atchison, Kansas, into one of the hottest home furnishing stores in the nation. Customers now come from miles away to feast their eyes on the ever-changing displays of unique and fascinating furniture and home-decorating accessories arranged with Garrity’s special flair for creating style and atmosphere. She shares her design secrets and decorating tips in this warmly illustrated book full of inspirational ideas for invigorating and enhancing your own home’s interior. She encourages her readers to try mix-and-match techniques and to use items they already own in new and creative ways. "Consider an object’s intended purpose," she suggests, "then challenge yourself to dream up other, totally unconnected treatments." She concludes with a room-by-room portfolio of practical suggestions, her list of "must haves" for creative decorating, and seven "rules" she breaks with aplomb, assuring readers they may "happily ignore" them, too, with similar success. If you feel you need a better understanding of the basic rules of design before you start breaking them, however, Better Homes and Garden’s Decorating Basics: Styles, Colors, Furnishings is a wonderful resource. It’s a user-friendly guide to understanding your own tastes and preferences and incorporating them into your home’s dŽcor. It offers a wealth of sage advice, and like Mary Carol Garrity’s book, showcases a philosophy of home decorating that embraces personal taste and one’s cherished belongings. "The joy as well as the challenge of early 21st century decorating is to learn how to pair elements harmoniously and gracefully. It’s about working with and enjoying your favorite colors, furnishings, collections, and art." Resplendent photos take you on sundry home tours in styles ranging from 50s Funk to Country French to Colorful Contemporary. This is a fun book, full of handy tips for the first-time homeowner or beginning decorator.

For the more serious student of design, Mary Gilliatt’s Interior Design Course is a handsome volume with in-depth chapters on specific room elements: walls and ceilings, floors, windows, furniture and finishing touches. Techniques for achieving a multitude of effects are explained in detail, terms are defined, and illustrative, inspiring photos complement the text. The pictures are as sumptuous as they are educational, and plenty of practical advice is sprinkled throughout as well: "A corridor will look less long and narrow if the end wall is painted or covered in a warm color." A renowned British designer, Gilliatt even delves into the play of light in a room, the chronology of style periods and an overview of period furniture on both sides of the Atlantic, making this a comprehensive as well as comely addition to any home library or coffee table. If your house is going to the dogs, and you need more than an innovative paint scheme to solve your decorating dilemmas don’t growl try Animal House Style: Designing a Home to Share with Your Pets by Julia Szabo. This book offers the latest in living with canines, cats and other creatures great and small. Animal lovers will appreciate this light-hearted book devoted to helping humans design pet-friendly accommodations for their co-habitant critters. From choosing appropriate flooring and fabrics to protect your home, to practical safety tips to protect your pet, this book demonstrates how living with animals doesn’t mean giving up style, beauty or your own creature comforts. It’s also packed with plenty of indoor shots, but of course, in these photographs, the dŽcor takes a back seat to the beguiling animals who innocently steal the show.

Aside from all the living, loving and pet-pampering we Americans do in our domiciles, an increasing number of us also accomplish some sort of additional work there. Whether a full-fledged home office is your need, or some space for your lucrative hobby is required, At Work at Home: Design Ideas for Your Home Workplace by Neal Zimmerman takes the home workplace to new heights. (Literally included are "elevated" work spaces like attics, lofts and tree houses, along with plenty of conventional room conversions, additions and renovations.) Again, the photos are divine, and whether you crave a state-of-the-art music studio, erudite writer’s retreat, cozy, out-of-the-way alcove for your computer or a complete home office, if these appealing work spaces don’t motivate you to action, they will certainly allow you to daydream in splendor.

Linda Stankard’s home, sweet home is in Cookeville, Tennessee.

 

Daydreaming may seem a little self-indulgent in these difficult times, but curling up with a glossy book on a dreary November day may be just the catalyst you need to re-envision and revitalize your home. Without these dreams, and the designing and redecorating that…

Review by

Daydreaming may seem a little self-indulgent in these difficult times, but curling up with a glossy book on a dreary November day may be just the catalyst you need to re-envision and revitalize your home. Without these dreams, and the designing and redecorating that follow, American homes would not be what they are: welcoming, comfortable places, full of the fragrance of good food cooking on the stove mingled with the sound of healthy debate in the air. Homes where antiques and air mattresses somehow go together.

American homes have become eclectic combinations of functionality, beauty, whimsy, technology and tradition. The season’s best home decorating books discuss planning and designing interior spaces, but they also capture that indomitable, contagious American spirit that is reflected in our individual dwellings our own sweet homes.

Mary Carol Garrity, author of Nell Hill’s Style at Home, is an example of American vivacity and success in her own right. Garrity followed her dream and defied the odds; she transformed an old bank building in the small Midwestern town of Atchison, Kansas, into one of the hottest home furnishing stores in the nation. Customers now come from miles away to feast their eyes on the ever-changing displays of unique and fascinating furniture and home-decorating accessories arranged with Garrity’s special flair for creating style and atmosphere. She shares her design secrets and decorating tips in this warmly illustrated book full of inspirational ideas for invigorating and enhancing your own home’s interior. She encourages her readers to try mix-and-match techniques and to use items they already own in new and creative ways. "Consider an object’s intended purpose," she suggests, "then challenge yourself to dream up other, totally unconnected treatments." She concludes with a room-by-room portfolio of practical suggestions, her list of "must haves" for creative decorating, and seven "rules" she breaks with aplomb, assuring readers they may "happily ignore" them, too, with similar success. If you feel you need a better understanding of the basic rules of design before you start breaking them, however, Better Homes and Garden’s Decorating Basics: Styles, Colors, Furnishings is a wonderful resource. It’s a user-friendly guide to understanding your own tastes and preferences and incorporating them into your home’s dŽcor. It offers a wealth of sage advice, and like Mary Carol Garrity’s book, showcases a philosophy of home decorating that embraces personal taste and one’s cherished belongings. "The joy as well as the challenge of early 21st century decorating is to learn how to pair elements harmoniously and gracefully. It’s about working with and enjoying your favorite colors, furnishings, collections, and art." Resplendent photos take you on sundry home tours in styles ranging from Ô50s Funk to Country French to Colorful Contemporary. This is a fun book, full of handy tips for the first-time homeowner or beginning decorator.

For the more serious student of design, Mary Gilliatt’s Interior Design Course is a handsome volume with in-depth chapters on specific room elements: walls and ceilings, floors, windows, furniture and finishing touches. Techniques for achieving a multitude of effects are explained in detail, terms are defined, and illustrative, inspiring photos complement the text. The pictures are as sumptuous as they are educational, and plenty of practical advice is sprinkled throughout as well: "A corridor will look less long and narrow if the end wall is painted or covered in a warm color." A renowned British designer, Gilliatt even delves into the play of light in a room, the chronology of style periods and an overview of period furniture on both sides of the Atlantic, making this a comprehensive as well as comely addition to any home library or coffee table. If your house is going to the dogs, and you need more than an innovative paint scheme to solve your decorating dilemmas don’t growl try Animal House Style: Designing a Home to Share with Your Pets by Julia Szabo. This book offers the latest in living with canines, cats and other creatures great and small. Animal lovers will appreciate this light-hearted book devoted to helping humans design pet-friendly accommodations for their co-habitant critters. From choosing appropriate flooring and fabrics to protect your home, to practical safety tips to protect your pet, this book demonstrates how living with animals doesn’t mean giving up style, beauty or your own creature comforts. It’s also packed with plenty of indoor shots, but of course, in these photographs, the dŽcor takes a back seat to the beguiling animals who innocently steal the show.

Aside from all the living, loving and pet-pampering we Americans do in our domiciles, an increasing number of us also accomplish some sort of additional work there. Whether a full-fledged home office is your need, or some space for your lucrative hobby is required, At Work at Home: Design Ideas for Your Home Workplace by Neal Zimmerman takes the home workplace to new heights. (Literally included are "elevated" work spaces like attics, lofts and tree houses, along with plenty of conventional room conversions, additions and renovations.) Again, the photos are divine, and whether you crave a state-of-the-art music studio, erudite writer’s retreat, cozy, out-of-the-way alcove for your computer or a complete home office, if these appealing work spaces don’t motivate you to action, they will certainly allow you to daydream in splendor.

Linda Stankard’s home, sweet home is in Cookeville, Tennessee.

Daydreaming may seem a little self-indulgent in these difficult times, but curling up with a glossy book on a dreary November day may be just the catalyst you need to re-envision and revitalize your home. Without these dreams, and the designing and redecorating that…

Review by

Daydreaming may seem a little self-indulgent in these difficult times, but curling up with a glossy book on a dreary November day may be just the catalyst you need to re-envision and revitalize your home. Without these dreams, and the designing and redecorating that follow, American homes would not be what they are: welcoming, comfortable places, full of the fragrance of good food cooking on the stove mingled with the sound of healthy debate in the air. Homes where antiques and air mattresses somehow go together.

American homes have become eclectic combinations of functionality, beauty, whimsy, technology and tradition. The season’s best home decorating books discuss planning and designing interior spaces, but they also capture that indomitable, contagious American spirit that is reflected in our individual dwellings our own sweet homes.

Mary Carol Garrity, author of Nell Hill’s Style at Home, is an example of American vivacity and success in her own right. Garrity followed her dream and defied the odds; she transformed an old bank building in the small Midwestern town of Atchison, Kansas, into one of the hottest home furnishing stores in the nation. Customers now come from miles away to feast their eyes on the ever-changing displays of unique and fascinating furniture and home-decorating accessories arranged with Garrity’s special flair for creating style and atmosphere. She shares her design secrets and decorating tips in this warmly illustrated book full of inspirational ideas for invigorating and enhancing your own home’s interior. She encourages her readers to try mix-and-match techniques and to use items they already own in new and creative ways. "Consider an object’s intended purpose," she suggests, "then challenge yourself to dream up other, totally unconnected treatments." She concludes with a room-by-room portfolio of practical suggestions, her list of "must haves" for creative decorating, and seven "rules" she breaks with aplomb, assuring readers they may "happily ignore" them, too, with similar success. If you feel you need a better understanding of the basic rules of design before you start breaking them, however, Better Homes and Garden’s Decorating Basics: Styles, Colors, Furnishings is a wonderful resource. It’s a user-friendly guide to understanding your own tastes and preferences and incorporating them into your home’s dŽcor. It offers a wealth of sage advice, and like Mary Carol Garrity’s book, showcases a philosophy of home decorating that embraces personal taste and one’s cherished belongings. "The joy as well as the challenge of early 21st century decorating is to learn how to pair elements harmoniously and gracefully. It’s about working with and enjoying your favorite colors, furnishings, collections, and art." Resplendent photos take you on sundry home tours in styles ranging from Ô50s Funk to Country French to Colorful Contemporary. This is a fun book, full of handy tips for the first-time homeowner or beginning decorator.

For the more serious student of design, Mary Gilliatt’s Interior Design Course is a handsome volume with in-depth chapters on specific room elements: walls and ceilings, floors, windows, furniture and finishing touches. Techniques for achieving a multitude of effects are explained in detail, terms are defined, and illustrative, inspiring photos complement the text. The pictures are as sumptuous as they are educational, and plenty of practical advice is sprinkled throughout as well: "A corridor will look less long and narrow if the end wall is painted or covered in a warm color." A renowned British designer, Gilliatt even delves into the play of light in a room, the chronology of style periods and an overview of period furniture on both sides of the Atlantic, making this a comprehensive as well as comely addition to any home library or coffee table. If your house is going to the dogs, and you need more than an innovative paint scheme to solve your decorating dilemmas don’t growl try Animal House Style: Designing a Home to Share with Your Pets by Julia Szabo. This book offers the latest in living with canines, cats and other creatures great and small. Animal lovers will appreciate this light-hearted book devoted to helping humans design pet-friendly accommodations for their co-habitant critters. From choosing appropriate flooring and fabrics to protect your home, to practical safety tips to protect your pet, this book demonstrates how living with animals doesn’t mean giving up style, beauty or your own creature comforts. It’s also packed with plenty of indoor shots, but of course, in these photographs, the dŽcor takes a back seat to the beguiling animals who innocently steal the show.

Aside from all the living, loving and pet-pampering we Americans do in our domiciles, an increasing number of us also accomplish some sort of additional work there. Whether a full-fledged home office is your need, or some space for your lucrative hobby is required, At Work at Home: Design Ideas for Your Home Workplace by Neal Zimmerman takes the home workplace to new heights. (Literally included are "elevated" work spaces like attics, lofts and tree houses, along with plenty of conventional room conversions, additions and renovations.) Again, the photos are divine, and whether you crave a state-of-the-art music studio, erudite writer’s retreat, cozy, out-of-the-way alcove for your computer or a complete home office, if these appealing work spaces don’t motivate you to action, they will certainly allow you to daydream in splendor.

Linda Stankard’s home, sweet home is in Cookeville, Tennessee.

Daydreaming may seem a little self-indulgent in these difficult times, but curling up with a glossy book on a dreary November day may be just the catalyst you need to re-envision and revitalize your home. Without these dreams, and the designing and redecorating that…

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