Make Wine Information Blog

4:48 AM

Tuesday - Rice Wine

Another Great Rice Wine Article

Champagne: How the World's Most Glamorous Wine Triumphed over War and Hard Times (Book Review)



Champagne: How the World's Most Glamorous Wine Triumphed over War and Hard Times, by Don & Petie Kladstrup, is one of those lovable books that entertain while informing and educating. Despite all the historical facts one learns from reading this book, the contents are not straight-laced or highbrow, but they contain real-life vineyard stories of human interest, the intricacies in the life of champagne as it evolved into the most glamorous drink, and colorful descriptions of the Champagne region.


The history of the Champagne region is conscientiously noted from the First Crusade and the times of the Huns, to the end of World War II, to our day when the writers walk through the Oise-Aisne American cemetery. In this cemetery, the poet Joyce Kilmer is buried as well as many American soldiers and the writers visit a chapel here, inside which the names of fallen soldiers whose bodies were never recovered are carved in marble. Since this region has become so closely connected to US history, reading this book brought its subject even closer to this American's heart.


Before the First Crusade, Champagne used to be a wool region where wool-trading was the most significant business. With the First Crusade, Champagne region evolved into a hub for trade routes, replacing the quiet countryside that it was earlier. During this time, the church took control of the region, which led to the invention of champagne.


It was the monk Dom Perignon who became the inventor of champagne. Dom Perignon improved wine-making by adding bubbles to the wine through the use of yeast. Those bubbles made Champagne the drink of all history; the oddity was that Dom Perignon, all through his life, tried to find a way to keep the bubbles out of the wine after adding the yeast. Later, Napoleon's conquering armies introduced this new wine to the world.


Among the most interesting parts of the book for me were the fight over champagne as armies ran over the region and drank up its reserves and supplies, the smuggling of champagne into Russia and the United States during the Prohibition, and the Damascus rose that became the symbol of the region with its image etched--without thorns--into buildings' fa?ades and printed on anything printable.


The introduction, This Hallowed Soil, reads like poetry at places, and the style of writing and diction is sincere, simple, and relaxed throughout the book. Following the introduction are nine chapters, an epilogue, author notes, bibliography and acknowledgements.


Black and white reproductions of paintings, drawings and photos of the figures important to champagne's history add a special touch to this 286-page, hardcover book in its middle. The ISBN for the book is 0060737921.


The authors,Don and Petie Kladstrup, are journalists. They have a previous book "Wine and War: The French, the Nazis, and the Battle for France's Greatest Treasure," which was released in 2002. Donald Kladstrup, a foreign correspondent for ABC and CBS television news, is the winner of three Emmys and the Alfred I. DuPont--Columbia University, Robert F. Kennedy Memorial, and Overseas Press Club of America awards for journalism. His wife, Petie Kladstrup, is a freelance writer who writes about France and French life.


Read the book. I loved it.




About the Author


Joy Cagil is an author on http://www.Writing.Com/
which is a site for Writers
Her portfolio can be found at http://www.Writing.Com/authors/joycag.



Rice Wine and More

Champagne: How the World's Most Glamorous Wine Triumphed over War and Hard Times (Book Review)


Champagne: How the World's Most Glamorous Wine Triumphed over War and Hard Times, by Don & Petie Kladstrup, is one of those lovable books that enterta...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Featured Rice Wine Items

Torciano Super Tuscan IL Cavaliere


Wow...this is a gorgeous wine from the estate of Tenuta Torciano. Pierluigi Giachi has been very busy with his enologist, Giovanni Capelli. Signore Capelli works with wineries in Piemonte, Veneto, Abruzzi, Toscana, and Lazio, and is helping Pierluigi to expand his wine ventures to include other regions as well as his native Tuscany. His practice for special wines like the IL Cavaliere is to keep various proportions of the wine in tank,large casks,and small barriques of oak and chestnut, allowing him to customize the final blends for different styles. This Super Tuscan is 70% Sangiovese and 30% Merlot primarily from oak barriques. This Italy wine from Chianti is a truly delicious and full-bodied wine with a deep and well-rounded structure. A blockbuster. ILC98 ILC98


Price: 49.99 USD



Rice Wine in the news

Cocaine and other Drug Products of the Past

Sat, 06 Dec 2008 02:54:38 -0800
Cocaine toothache drops (c. 1885) were popular for children. Not only would the medicine numb the pain, but it could also put the user in a “better” mood. Bayer heroin bottle. From 1898 to 1910 heroin was marketed as a non-addictive morphine substitute and cough medicine for children! Metcalf’s Coca Wine was one of a large number of cocaine-containing wines available on the market. All claimed medicinal effects, although they were undoubtedly consumed for their “recreational” value as

Bush and the Rum Runners

Fri, 05 Dec 2008 20:29:20 -0800
As of a few days ago, George W. Bush, our president in body only and not in mind at this point, had pardoned 171 people from their past and present sins. And there are some odd but clear patterns arising in that list — namely drug trafficking, bank embezzling and a crime clear out of the blue that most would never imagine - Moonshining. Say what? Is this 21st century Washington, DC or an episode of the Beverly Hillbillies? Moonshining in 2008? Well, actually no. Not moonshining in 2008, bu

Organic Chocolates Never Tasted So Good

Fri, 05 Dec 2008 17:59:51 -0800
Photo of Green and Black’s Dark Chocolate and Wine Collection While I was at the New York Chocolate Show, I was feeling a lot like Charlie, the main character of the book, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, as he toured the Wonka Chocolate Factory. Although the Show did not have Oompa-Loompas or Everlasting Gobstoppers, it featured some amazing and diverse chocolate makers sure to please everyone’s palate. This article is part II of my series on organic chocolate companies at the Show. I

Vintners hope to win over presidential palate (KSBY San Luis Obispo)

Fri, 05 Dec 2008 17:12:03 -0800
Associated Press - December 5, 2008 7:54 PM ET NAPA, Calif. (AP) - Wine makers hopeful to win over the Obamas' palates are curious what's on tap for the next occupants of 1600 Pennsylvania...

Vintners hope to win over presidential palate (KESQ Palm Springs)

Fri, 05 Dec 2008 17:04:52 -0800
NAPA, Calif. (AP) - Wine makers hopeful to win over the Obamas' palates are curious what's on tap for the next occupants of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Chef Rick Bayless owns the upscale Chicago restaurant Topolobampo, where the president-elect and his wife have ordered from the wine list.


Wine Grape
|

Labels:

BlinkBitsBlinkList Add To BlogmarksCiteULike
diigo furl Google  LinkaGoGo
HOLM ma.gnolianetvouzrawsugar
reddit Mojo this page at Rojo Scuttle Smarking
spurl Squidoo StumbleUpon Tailrank
TechnoratiAddThis Social Bookmark Button
&type=page">Add to any serviceSocial Bookmark
onlywire Socializersocialize it