Reddit Reddit reviews Drink This: Wine Made Simple

We found 3 Reddit comments about Drink This: Wine Made Simple. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Cookbooks, Food & Wine
Books
Culinary Arts & Techniques
Budget Cooking
Drink This: Wine Made Simple
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3 Reddit comments about Drink This: Wine Made Simple:

u/megagoosey · 4 pointsr/wine

Drink This - Wine Made Simple - Great book for beginners

The Wine Bible

The Essential Scratch and Sniff Guide to Becoming a Wine Expert - Seems like it's a joke, and it sooort of is, but there's some good information there, and the scratch and sniff thing is actually quite useful.

The World Atlas of Wine - Pretty much the ultimate wine book. If you don't want to spend that much on it, consider buying a used copy of the older edition. You can get it for just a few bucks. Obviously it won't be as up to date, but it's still extremely useful.

Pairing Food and Wine for Dummies - John Szabo is legit

Great Wine Made Simple

Up until recently I worked at a book store, these were the books I recommended most frequently to people. If you want ones about specific regions, there are some good ones out there too. These are all more general.

u/DevastatorIIC · 3 pointsr/wine

Wine is a huge beast, but a lot of fun. You can't really sit down in one weekend and completely understand everything.

Your first step is trying different red and white wines - red wines being red grapes soaked with their grape skins before fermentation, and whites being white grapes drained off immediately. The extra skin contact lets tannins enter the liquid, and creates the bitter/dry taste (think what your mouth feels like after eating a slightly too-ripe banana).

Your local wine store is going to be your best friend in your experimentation - those clerks are very knowledgeable (unlike the ones at the grocery store, for example), and can help guide you when you tell them what you thought of each wine you try.

As for actual recommendation: go to your local wine shop and ask for a good budget Riesling and Shiraz/Syrah that aren't blended. Expect to spend about $15 on each. Chill the Riesling when you get home.

When you're ready to try the wines, get a notepad out so you can remember what you thought weeks later (I ran into this problem when I first started). Open one, pour a glass, and smell it. The bouquet is extremely important in wine. Sniff it for a good minute and write down what you smell. Different fruits, foods, not-foods (rubber is a common aroma in some varietals). Then taste it, hold it in your mouth for a second and make sure it gets your whole tongue. Again, write down what you taste and what you think of it. If you want to try both wines at the same time (actually a great idea), I'd do the white one first, and make sure to drink some water between the tastings (the traditional cleansing of one's palate).

Wine doesn't have to be snooty - this is supposed to be fun. I swear I had a wine that reminded me of a meat-lovers pizza.

If you really enjoy it, I picked up a book recently: Drink This. Very down to earth and good information for beginners.

u/str1cken · 2 pointsr/pics

Huh!

That's really interesting!

A close friend's father introduced me to brewing when I was, like, 16 (after sneaking no small amount of his home brew) and we spent several afternoons brewing together and he told me a lot about how the different ingredients and brewing methods work to create different flavors and styles of beer, so I have an (admittedly basic and ineloquent) understanding of hops and grains and malts.

I also cook a lot, so flavors and ingredients are really important to me and I'm keenly aware of what a big difference something like fresh basil can make over a dried ground powder in a freshly prepared meal. That's not snobbery, it's just a fact. Good quality ingredients are important to crafting excellent food.

I got curious about wine a couple years back and read Drink This, which is an amazingly easy to read and unpretentious guide to learning what exactly the difference between Syrah and Merlot is. (And all the other varietals.) The book recommends a lot of tasting, and I can't drink 5 bottles in one go by myself so I decided to make a game out of it and gave a powerpoint lecture on each chapter to my friends and we did all the tastings together. Super educational and a great experience. Would definitely recommend.

For the record, I didn't know anything about anything regarding wine when I started out on that little adventure. No shame, full curiosity.

Anyway.

I don't know of any great books about beers off the top of my head but this is the book I was given to learn about brewing. It will give you a huge amount of insight into the process and ingredients (and history!) of brewing if you're interested.

I totally understand why you made the analogy you did now. Thanks for clearing that up!

And yeah, while I totally agree that people can use beer knowledge as a way to feel superior to those around them, and that habit is stupid and annoying, there really is a lot to learn about beer (and pretty much everything else in the world, duh) and a whole lot of great stuff out there to taste! So don't let those jerkbags ruin that experience for you. Go check it out!