I know it sounds like a stretch to say this encyclopedia of wine grapes changed my life but it really did.
It started off slow as it is a very dense book but after a while I realized that I drink only a small fraction of the wines and grapes available and that I should consciously expand my drinking habits.
My notes are basically on what I should drink more of.
Highly recommended but realize it is a bit dated now.
p. 27: Monbazillac
p. 31: Yalumba of Australia
p. 34: Aidani from Santorini
p. 35: Aligote: Burgundy's second white grape
p. 37: Albarino: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 38: Assyrtico
p. 41: Barbera: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 43: Bonarda: Grown in Argentina
p. 54: "Most top California Cabernets are in thrall to the points system, and it makes for wines which are textbook-perfect--ripe, supple, polished--but which lack personality."
p. 59: Chasselas: "Switzerland's favourite grape variety"
p. 61: Carmenere: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 88: Dornfelder: Best producers (Germany): Lingenfelder
p. 98: "The last thing the world needs is more overcropped, anonymous red."
p. 121: Malvasia: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 125: Marsanne: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 131: Michel Rolland, Merlot guru
p. 137: Merlot: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 141: Mourvedre: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 153: Muscat: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 163: Nebbiolo: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 169: Pinot Grigio: "If vineyard yields are too high, as they frequently are, this delicacy turns to blandness; however, this doesn't stop Pinot Grigio being archetypal Italian restaurant wine, and some of it is really very pleasant."
p. 171: "'Subtlety' can so easily become a euphemism for dilution and blandness."
p. 181: "Rheingau producer Robert Weil has some Spatburgunder in a site too hot for Riesling, but usually a grower must choose between the two grapes."
p. 185: Pinot Noir: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 187: Pinotage: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 191: "In some people's eyes, Chardonnay is the great Satan; the ruthless colonizer and destroyer of the world's vineyards and the world's palate. Riesling lovers, in particular, bridle at the runaway success of the easy-going, crowd-pleaser Chardonnay, and chunter among themselves that Chardonnay is a little slip of a thing, a flibbertygibbet with no depth and no complexity."
p. 201: Non-German Rieslings: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 205: Roussanne: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 214: "Only in Brunello di Montalcino must the DOCG wine be made entirely of Sangiovese."
p. 214: "The raft of super-Tuscan vini da tavola which emerged in the 1980s did little to help the confusion." | "table wine"
p. 227: Sauvignon Blanc: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 229: Scheurebe: Best producers (Germany): Lingenfelder
p. 239: Semillon: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 242: Silvaner: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 249: Rhone Ranger
p. 255: Shiraz: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 265: Tempranillo: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 283: Viognier: Recommended Wines To Try
p. 294: zinfandel.org
p. 295: Zinfandel: Recommended Wines To Try