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Cooking & Food. Nonfiction. HTML: The Essential, New York Times�??Bestselling Guide to Botany and Booze "A book that makes familiar drinks seem new again . . . Through this horticultural lens, a mixed drink becomes a cornucopia of plants."�??NPR's Morning Edition "Amy Stewart has a way of making gardening seem exciting, even a little dangerous." �??The New York Times Sake began with a grain of rice. Scotch emerged from barley, tequila from agave, rum from sugarcane, bourbon from corn. Thirsty yet? In The Drunken Botanist, Amy Stewart explores the dizzying array of herbs, flowers, trees, fruits, and fungi that humans have, through ingenuity, inspiration, and sheer desperation, contrived to transform into alcohol over the centuries. Of all the extraordinary and obscure plants that have been fermented and distilled, a few are dangerous, some are downright bizarre, and one is as ancient as dinosaurs�??but each represents a unique cultural contribution to our global drinking traditions and our history. This fascinating concoction of biology, chemistry, history, etymology, and mixology�??with more than fifty drink recipes and growing tips for gardeners�??will make you the most popular guest at any co… (more)
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I loved this book. While the format is something like an encyclopedia, I read it cover-to-cover, and was sad when i reached the end; the entries were that informative and well-written that it was more engaging than some novels I've read recently.
I knew some of the background info, but a
The suggestions of ways to explore more- like with tequilas and liqueurs- were really interesting, and our bar storage is going to be increasing. The drink recipes included worked really well based on those I tried.
Now- I got this as an ARC from LibraryThing, so the indices weren't functional, and the printing was gray-scale rather than the 2-color promised in the "real" version. Based on this, though, I've ordered the ":real" version, because I think it'll be worth it; I've also ordered a couple of the author's other books.
It really is that good.
If you are interested in the history of booze, or in cocktails, or spirits in general- I HIGHLY recommend this book. It is not only really informative, it's a great read.
Had no idea how much there was to know about booze! That is, I knew from high school biology that yeast can convert pretty much any sugar into alcohol, and I knew that all plants store energy as sugars/starches … but for some reason never put the pieces together; that, ergo, pretty much every imaginable tree/plant/flower/fruit/vegetable/seed can be transformed into an intoxicant. Which, it turns out, is an aim we humans have been obsessively pursuing for the past 4000 years or so!
I now possess answers to so many questions I didn’t even know I had: what makes Kentucky bourbon so good (hint: it’s nothing to do with the alcohol), why almost all commercial apple trees are cloned, why barley – not hops – is the distiller’s best friend, why “100 proof” means 51% pure alcohol, what hops and marijuana have in common, the proper pronunciation of ginseng (turns out I’ve been doing it wrong for, like, 50 years), the unexpectedly swashbuckling and dangerous history of botanical discovery, the chemistry behind the magic that occurs when whisky comes in contact with oak, why moonshine is often so deadly. I’m also now an expert on freaky plant sex, but since this is a family forum I’ll leave it at that.
The book is laid out as if to be used as a reference, but as my experience proves, it also works as a cover-to-cover read. Nor is it necessary that you possess a background in science or down drinks like a feature actor on the show Mad Men to find this entertaining and enriching. (Though now that I’ve read this, I do find myself possessed by an irresistible desire to sample all the exotic beverages and cocktails Stewart describes – is there such a thing as a “Drunken Botanist completist”? – which could definitely put a dent in my happy hour productivity.)
Perhaps because this book is so quirky is why it worked for me: I do love it when an author takes me in hand and introduces me to a whole new discipline/philosophy/world that I never appreciated before!
It is broken into three parts, the most common and well known plants and drinks, then to the more unusual plants, herbs, fruits and spices and finally tips on growing your
The first part was the best and the easiest to read as it had the most information, not just about the plants and drinks themselves but some of their history and developments. The writing style is very engaging and you learn a lot without feeling like you've had a ton of information dumped on you. The second part dragged a bit as some of the plant entries were just lists of how they were used in drinks with no history of further information, though this is understandable as if the author had added as much information in the second part as in the first the book would have been huge.
The third part about growing your own plants was short and not very detailed as gardening is so specific to your region but gave a good impression of what would be needed and what to consider when looking to grow your own.
I learned a lot from this book and was inspired to look up further information, more than anything I loved reading the history behind some of the drinks and ingredients we take for granted.
It’s always best in arenas of the unknown to start at the beginning and that is exactly what The Drunken Botanist does. To understand and appreciate the book is just like making a cocktail. Part I enumerates the plants that are used to make the basic varieties of alcohol. You quickly learn that there are almost an unlimited number of results of fermentation or distillation. What you get usually is dependent upon plant availability, geography, or tradition. What you do with your basic alcohol (aging, etc.) can then produce the next range of products.
Moving on to Part II, we now start adding various herbs and spices, flowers, trees, fruit, and nuts and seeds to our “basic” alcohol. This is how we get to that whole range of liqueurs, crèmes, fruit-this and nut-that. I’m particularly intrigued by the origins and history and varieties of gin. I’ve long said that there should be a museum of gin. And do you know anyone else who carries a little picture card in his wallet showing some ten botanicals in gin!
What is striking at this point is how important the varieties of alcohol and spices have been in the trade and commerce and history of the world.
Part III finishes the cocktail with the bounty of the garden used, as some would say, a garnish, but more importantly as fresh ingredients in your libation or as an integral part of a well-considered finished product.
There’s a basic backbone that runs through The Drunken Botanist so that it’s readable for a good knowledge and understanding of the depth and breadth of the subject, but there are also so, so many small sections and sidebars that can be read separately (and at random). There’s more basic knowledge and trivial pleasure here than you could quickly skim through.
So, taking my gin martini … on ice with dry vermouth and orange bitters … in hand, I’m ready to read on. The only thing that I might ask for is some new liquor that might stand as tall as the redwoods of Amy Stewart’s northwestern California. St. George Spirits has their Botanivore gin with 19 botanicals, Anchor Distilling (San Francisco) has their Junipero gin, and Clear Creek Distillery produces Douglas fir eau-de-vie. Maybe something along the lines of a Sequoia semprevirens liqueur. Hmmm.
Humankind's relationship with alcohol is a long one. If it grows, we've tried to ferment, distill or brew it. There are so many fun facts in this book, found on every page. How to drink absinthe, a particularly literary liqueur. The role bugs play in making booze. Why beer bottles are brown. How to make alcohol from bananas, sweet potatoes and even parsnips. I'm an avid wine drinker, and now I want to try aromatized wines; before this book, I didn't even know what those were, but they sure sound delicious.
The Drunken Botanist is a pleasure to leaf through, preferably with a drink close at hand. It reminds me of an old-fashioned reference manual, with its charming black-and-white sketches and cocktail recipe "cards." This book should appeal to all kinds of hobbyists: nature lovers, gardeners, brewers, cooks, mixologists and anyone who enjoys a tipple from time to time.
The Drunken Botanist explores the relationship between man, the alcohol he
Having this book in the Early Reviewers program has certainly helped the author's sales (at least on my end 8-) I greatly enjoyed the author's style, and education mixed with fun is always a hit. Wonderful!
Stewart has written a book that, while small, is encyclopedic in style. First she takes us through the plants- grains, potatoes, cacti, grasses - that are fermented and distilled to make hard liquors; then she goes through categories like fruit, sap (sugar maple), and roots that are fermented and the herbs, seeds, nuts, and barks that are used to flavor the brews. For each plant she tells us how and where it was/is used, what it adds to the brew, which brands of the brew are best, and for many, how to grow the plant. This is where the book ties into gardening: while the average gardener won’t be growing grain and setting up a still, most gardeners are able to grow some mint for mojitos, jalapenos for some special margaritas, cherry tomatoes for a Blushing Mary, or a fruit tree. Face it; nearly everything in an alcoholic drink comes from plants except for bacon vodka and Irish cream. And a lot of those things are easy to grow. The author includes over 50 drink recipes for the home mixologist.
The book accomplished two things for me: I have a lot better understanding of alcohols and the history of drinks, and I want to try a lot of things I can’t afford but really want to taste, like violet liqueur and fancy vodka. And I’m looking at my garden with a new eye: what can I grab out of it to make a drink?
Stewart explores the world of drinking from a purely botanical perspective. She provides details on the breeding history of certain plants, how their biochemistry provides flavor and structure to the end product, and its history in the use of drink-making. Also included are several classic drink recipes. The pure amount of information in here is staggering. This is another of those “nugget” reads—check in, grab a few choice bits, and then check out. It gets a little overwhelming when you try to consume it all in one sitting. To be fair, Stewart does keep the writing light and understandable, and her regular digressions into plant care or biographical history break up the fear of reading entry after entry. I enjoyed this book for the fact that she explored very little-known liqueurs, including Lillet, Fernet, and several other obscure bottling. Even a liquor expert will still find a few things they didn’t know before. A thick but still informative book.
Is this a cookbook, a gardening primer or a history tome? Yes to all and greater than a sum of its parts. Author Amy Stewart states her aim is to turn the gardener into a party host/mix master and the bartender into a gardener (even
Divided into a logical progression of three parts, the book begins at the beginning with distillation/fermentation. The classic cast of characters are covered - grains, sugarcane, grapes, etc - but also more obscure sources such as date palm, parnips and monkey puzzle (?!). In Part Two, Stewart discusses the flavorings added to the alcohol to make various spirits and liqueurs. Categories covered are herbs/spices, flowers, trees, fruit and nuts/seeds with the mulitple entries in each category dealt with in detail. Part Three is where the flavorings and garnishes are added to a finished cocktail. Much of this materical has already been covered in Part Two (and is therefore put into handy dandy tables labeled Growing Notes) but anything unique to this section receives its own entry. In conclusion, there is an extensive recommended reading section.
Truly a joy to read, the writing is cheeky and fast paced but without sacrificing detail - it reads much more like a novel than appearances would indicate. I know I've gone on about the extent of detail in this book and the reason for this is that I was looking for Stewart to trip up in this regard. Having relatives in East Europe who were alcohol distributors who passed some of their knowledge on to me made me a hard judge but Stewart hit every point with mastery. So much bang for the buck here - 50 recipes included for cocktails and another 13 for "add-ons" (I never thought to make my own maraschino cherries - yep, there's a recipe). Also included are a number of "aside" and "grow your own" boxes scattered throughout (with my favorite being about the drunken lorikeets).
Highly recommended and deserving of 5 stars. So why is the rating missing a half star? The ARC I am reviewing does not have the final index or table of contents set; a misstep in this area would be extremely problematic in this type of reference work (I can't review what I can't see). Even so, loved it!
"Every great drink starts with a plant," so says Amy Stewart in The Drunken Botanist: The Plants That Create the World's Greatest Drinks." Stewart should know; she's also the author of Flower Confidential and
The Drunken Botanist explores every botanical (160 species in all) related to alcohol. The first part explores the classics. These are the plants that are transferred into alcohol, from agave to wheat. Stewart combines the plants history, misconceptions, the differences between plant varieties, and how they are produced into alcohol. She further goes into the varieties of alcohol based on production. For example, there are 9 different apple spirits all differentiated by the apple fruit varietal content, aging, and other factors (apple brandy, applejack, apple liqueur, apple wine, Calvados, Calvados Domfrontais, Calvados Pays d'Auge, eau de vie, and pomeau).
The second part explores trees and their relationship to alcohol and mixers. Stewart writes about the interesting history of angostura bitters and why quinine glows under ultraviolet light. The third part explores fruit and alcohol, diving into such favorites as Theobroma cacoa (chocolate), marasca cherry (maraschino cherries), sloe berry (sloe gin), and the many varieties of citrus. If you have a green thumb, she gives tips for growing black currants, cherry trees, sloe shrubs, and citrus. She ends this section with nuts and seeds.
The last part is dedicated to finishing: herbs for muddling and infusing; flowers for garnish, color, and flavor; and trees, berries, fruits, and vegetables that are so important in mixed drinks.
Informative read with lots of recipes to experiment with, The Drunken Botanist is more than a coffee table or a culinary or bar reference book. It truly is a guidebook to all things botanical in both the worlds of new age mixology and classic bartending. Recommended read.
If you're a gardener, you get the bonus of tips on growing a number of plants that can be used in drinks. If you're just someone who enjoys beverages, you get a good variety of classic drink recipes. If you don't fall into either of those categories, you'll get a nice assortment of information useful for your next bar trivia night, or just to impress your friends.
Summary: The Drunken Botanist is, as evidenced by the quote above, a look at the various plants - and there's a lot of them - that go into producing various varieties of alcohol all over the world. It's written a bit like an encylopedia: a collection of short essays about each plant, with a description of how it is used in alcohol production and its flavor (for some of the less-well-known species) as well as some of its relevant natural and cultural history. Stewart builds the book the same way one would build a cocktail - starting out with the plants that contribute to the base spirits and other standard drinks (agave, apple, barley, corn, grapes, potato, rice, rye, sorghum, sugarcane, and wheat), then moving into the variety of plants used to flavor various liquors, and finally touching on the remaining plants most frequently used as mixers. There are also tips on growing your own bartender's garden, as well as more than 60 recipes scattered throughout the books in their relevant sections, including classics (and slight variations on classics) and some more modern creations.
Review: While this book took me seemingly forever to get through, I think that was more a product of the structure of the book than of anything else. The short-essay/article format of this book made it wonderful for the commute - get on the bus, read about a plant or two, get off the bus - but it simultaneously made it almost impossible to read straight through. But apart from that, this book was definitely a fun and interesting read. Stewart manages to pack in not only the basics of how fermentation and distillation work to produce alcohol, but plenty of history on how and when each of the plants became involved in the process ("The tradition of flavoring alcohol with apricots seems to have begun about ten minutes after the introduction of the apricots themselves."), and lots of great trivia ("Next time you pull a piece of silk from between your teeth while you're eating a fresh ear of corn, remember that you've just spat out a fallopian tube."), all with a light, easy-to-read style and a humorous edge.
While I already had a pretty good grasp on the science of fermentation, I did learn quite a bit about how the specific process varies for each of the different species of plants involved, and I picked up some useful trivia. (For instance, the word "proof" as a measure of the alcohol content of various liquors comes from the fact that if the rum rations on British naval ships were watered down, they wouldn't catch fire when mixed with gunpowder and lit - a test which was demanded as "proof" that sailors weren't being cheated with watery rum.) I also came away from this book with an increased appreciation for the more high-quality liquors - particularly liqueurs that are actually made from the fruit in question, rather than loaded with artificial flavoring - and have started to cast a skeptical eye on some of the cheaper bottles in my bar. (Although on that tip, it turns out that Amaretto di Saronno doesn't actually contain almonds, but instead the closely-related apricot kernel.) And while I probably won't be growing my own pomegranates for grenadine, I've got a pot of mint on the back porch (as should everyone who enjoys cocktails!), and I will certainly be mixing up some of the recipes Stewart provides. 4 out of 5 stars.
Recommendation: This book would be great for the cocktail enthusiasts out there, particularly (but not exclusively) those with a scientific bent.