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
Selected Book Details
- Hardcover
- Author: Andrew Dornenburg, Karen Page
- Publisher: Bulfinch
- Release Date: September 2006
- ISBN-10: 0821257188
- ISBN-13: 9780821257180
- List Price: $35.00
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Summaries and Customer Reviews provided by Amazon
SummaryThe most comprehensive guide to matching food and drink ever compiled, by the James Beard Award winning author team of Karen Page and Andrew Dornenburg, with practical advice from more than seventy of America’s leading pairing experts In a great meal, what you drink is just as important as what you eat. This groundbreaking food and beverage pairing reference allows food lovers to learn to think like a sommelier, and to transform every meal - breakfast, lunch, and dinner - from ordinary to extraordinary. Exceptional in its depth and scope - with over fifteen hundred entries - What to Drink with What You Eat is based on the collective wisdom of experts at dozens of America’s best restaurants, including Alinea, Babbo, Bern’s, Blue Hill, Chanterelle, Daniel, Emeril’s, French Laundry, Frontera Grill, Inn at Little Washington, Jean Georges, Masa’s, The Modern, Per Se, Rubicon, Tru, and Valentino. You’ll find authoritative recommendations for stocking your cellar and kitchen with must-have beverages, from wines to waters. You’ll also learn what to drink with everything from French toast to Chinese food, and what to eat with everything from Pinot Noir to green tea, to create mouthwatering matches. Follow the authors three simple Rules to Remember when making a match - or just dive into the wide-ranging listings in chapters 5 and 6. This incisive, hip writing team (Publisher’s Weekly) distills history, geography, science, expert technique, and original insight to create a remarkably user-friendly and engaging reference. Lavishly illustrated with gorgeous four-color photographs, What to Drink with What You Eat is an instant classic essential to every connoisseur’s bookshelf. |
Customer Reviews
Average Rating:
Great compilation for food and wine lovers!
"What to eat with what you drink" is definitely a must for those who wish to take a step further in enjoying food and hospitality by enhancing and re-creating the perfect food and wine pairing. I love this book a lot!!!
Note that "What to Drink with what you drink" has an encyclopedic approach, encompassing beverages beyond wine.
It could be a bit overwhelming at first sight as it contains a massive amount of info. The dark side of this is that - believe it or not - there is no index, and the topics arrangement is rather messy. In any case, the content of What to Drink with What You Eat is a reliable, substantial wine/food pairing encyclopedia, of great help before heading off to a restaurant or getting wine for a party.
The presentation of the book is outstanding: high quality paper, attractive photographs, beautifully written. A great gift for Christmas! I do recommend it!
Perfect for the cook who has everything
Gift for a professional chef, used it to match their restaurants menu with the perfect pairing. Great reference and fun conversation starter.
Useful at any budget level for selecting your own food-wine pairings
This book is both a great learning tool for the novice as well as a great reference for the more experienced wine enthusiast. The authors don't provide a list of specific vintages of wine, but rather a guideline for selecting particular types of wines from various locations to pair with general food categories or specific dishes. With this kind of guidance, you have the knowledge to select a wine from any price range to go with a special meal and have reasonably good results.
A Hefty book, but...
This is a really hefty book, with a massive amount of info. When I saw it in a bookstore, I knew I had to have. When I was able to sit down and actually read this book, I felt overwhelmed. I still have yet to finish it. There is so much info. here and it seems as if this book was a swift job, leaving it messily compiled. As another reviewer stated, there is no index, very frustrating. And there are huge sections on other 'sommeliers' ideas on what food should go with what drink, and experiences they have had, a few recipes throughout from across the country and just relative talk. At some point, I felt as if the authors used this book as a stage for ranting and raving (there is also some foul language scattered).
Being new to wine I would have liked a basic book, that described the basics of wine. History, origin, grape, climate, best, not so good, etc. But I felt overwhelmed with the chattering that goes on. If I could do it over again I would have taken my time in the book store to look it over, (that is why one should go ALONE -- no one to rush them) and I would have made the desicion NOT to have purchased this book. I feel it is way overpriced for the information given. There are only THREE chapters worth owning here.
A better book to purchase, that gets to the point, is This Food, That wine by Chris Knight. It's quick, to the point with great recipes for almost all types of meats, vegetables, appetizers and treats, without being overwhelming. They make wine not scary. I absolutely love it.
This Food, That Wine
I can go as far as to say that this book can be used as a companion book to
This Food, That Wine, when you, as a begginer grow in knowledge.
I would recommend that any begginer or intermediatary, skip this book. I only wish I did. A bit dissapointed.
For a Palate Opening Experience
I used this and a book from the public library for a paper pairing foods and beverages. I found this to be very interesting and something I wanted for my personal library... I wasn't really sure it would be something I wanted to keep when I bought it.
While there are no definitive answers on anything, I liked the way pairings were ranked...
* Bold ALL CAPS* - a "Holy Grail" pairing
* Bold ALL CAPS - pairing many/most sommeliers would recommend
* Bold - pairing many sommeliers would recommend
* Regular type - pairing one or more sommeliers recommended