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4+ opere 84 membri 4 recensioni 1 preferito

Opere di Eric Asimov

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Etichette

Informazioni generali

Altri nomi
ASIMOV, Eric
Sesso
male
Attività lavorative
wine critic
Organizzazioni
The New York Times

Utenti

Recensioni

Even if you enjoy drinking wine, though, there's a feeling of uncertainty, a compulsive need to clarify that you're not really a "wine person". A "wine person" can stick their nose into a glass and identify smells like pepper and starfruit, or take a sip and taste dried leather or mushroom. Eric Asimov's How To Love Wine seeks to push back against that perception. As the Chief Wine Critic of the New York Times, Asimov uses his book to try to de-mystify and remove barriers to the enjoyment of wine by advocating a simple, straightforward message: the best way to enjoy wine is with good food and good friends.

In fact, this message is so simple and straightforward that the book ultimately feels padded. Even as he takes on various aspects of the wine-industrial complex, like tasting notes that seem to pride themselves on evoking obscure flavors usually based on just a few sips of the wine in question, often influenced by the tasting of several other wines at the same time, he returns again and again to his central thesis: the way to love wine is to drink it with people you love while sharing a meal. There are certain basic characteristics like acidity and tannins that, if you're willing to experiment and try a bunch of varieties, you'll eventually be able to pick up on, and the only ones that matter are the ones you discover for yourself actually impact your enjoyment of the wine in question. People often feel like they "have to" like wines with high scores from magazines and insiders, that if that wine doesn't work for them that they're the ones who are wrong, but not everyone likes the same flavors. Feeling this kind of pressure, to like the types of wines that are in fashion at any given moment, to like highly-rated wines, is one of the reasons people are afraid to really embrace wine.

There's a reason that Asimov has spent much of his career writing for one of the foremost newspapers in the country: he's a talented writer. That the book doesn't feel painfully repetitive (though the padding is impossible to miss) is a testament to his skills. He really loves the way drinking wine feels, and his enthusiasm about trying to make it easier for everyone to have that same kind of enjoyment is contagious. I've mostly become a craft beer drinker these days, but by the time I ended this book I found myself wanting to pop open a bottle of red and make some pasta and hang out eating and drinking with my husband...which was exactly the intention of the book. If you're curious about wine but have found yourself frightened off by snooty wine culture, this is a solid book to read. If you're not really that into it, though, it's skippable.
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ghneumann | 3 altre recensioni | Jun 14, 2024 |
I appreciated Asimov's approach on enjoying and learning to love wine. Basically he says embrace wine's ambiguity and just explore. Eventually you will learn by discovering what you like. Wine is best explored with food, friends and occasions. He also disdains the overblown tasting notes (hints of tobacco! floral accents! spicy undertones! serve with grilled eel!) and the wine-scoring system which can be a handy guide for consumers but also doesn't recognize other wines that can be of equal or better value and quality. A low-key and friendly approach to learning about wine, much the way I decided to undertake it when I started getting into wines.… (altro)
 
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Salsabrarian | 3 altre recensioni | Feb 2, 2016 |
Review as tasting note:

Virtually colourless. Bitter aromas reminiscent of sour grapes and dirty laundry. Thin, flat and somewhat oxidized with a short, dilute finish. Drink by: yesterday.

(More seriously: there's just nothing new, interesting or meaningful here. Both Asimov's complaints and his enthusiasms are very old news in the wine world and I doubt there's a previously published book out there that hasn't covered them already, likely with more flair and greater thoroughness. I generally enjoy Asimov's work at the New York Times but this book is a brief magazine article padded into a very thin, exceptionally dull vanity volume. There's little reason to read this much less to buy it. Spend the cash on a wine you like instead.)… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
marietherese | 3 altre recensioni | May 27, 2013 |
Asimov, Eric. How To Love Wine: A Memoir and Manifesto. WM: HarperCollins. 2012. c.272p. ISBN 9780061802522. $24.99. HOME ECON

Many wine-lovers wonder, as they are poured wine to taste from the bottle they have just ordered, what exactly they are supposed to do. “Wine is one of the coolest things in the world. To love it is a great joy. Why do we make it so hard?” asks Asimov, chief wine critic of the New York Times, as he muses on the anxieties that befall today’s wine lovers who just want to enjoy a pleasant drink. Not only does he share his takes on the changes in the industry, scoring, and tasting, he also highlights key moments that led to his love of the grape, which steered him to his enviable position. VERDICT Well written and interesting; a good choice for beginning wine enthusiasts.—Jane Hebert, Glenside P.L. Dist., Glendale Heights, IL

http://reviews.libraryjournal.com/2012/12/books/nonfic/sci-tech/science-technolo...
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janiereader | 3 altre recensioni | Feb 22, 2013 |

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Statistiche

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Utenti
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Popolarità
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Voto
½ 3.4
Recensioni
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ISBN
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Preferito da
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