Beer Tasting Books
beer tasting books
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33 Bottles of Beer Tasting Notebook $4.49 Beer journals are a great way to keep track of your brews and this particular beer log has ample space for 33 in-depth reviews. Made in the US using recycled papers and soy-based inks, this handy notebook makes it easier than ever to take valuable tasting notes! Simply check a couple of boxes and jot down a few basic facts and you’re good to go. All of your notes stay organized in one place so you… |
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Classic Beer Glass Connoisseur Collection – 4 Glass Set & Tasting Book $39.95 Every true beer connoisseur needs a collection of fine beer glasses for drinking at home! Each specially designed piece in this beer glass set enhances the aroma and improves the taste of the beer style it was made for. The Belgian beer glass is tulip-shaped to better aerate the bouquet while the wheat glass is has extra width at the top to accommodate a thick, fluffy head. Your imperial pint is m… |
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Italian Leather Wine Journal, Label Area, Embossed Designs, Gift Boxed, 7×10 $150.00 This ingenious wine journal lets tasters neatly record the wine they’ve enjoyed and their impressions, with whom they had it, the vintage, origin, and of course, an area for the steamed off label. This Writing Journal was made by hand with skills learned from centuries of experience. —– fill-in lines include: name of wine, denomination of origin, vintage, produced and bottled by, area of produc… |
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Rate That Beer Note Pad Paper Sheets By Knock Knock $5.90 What could be better than drinking beer? Consuming, dissecting, and discussing beer – all at the same time! Whether you’re a craft brew enthusiast or just enjoy knocking a few back, isn’t it time you got to know your beverage of choice? Fun for tasting parties or for drinking alone. Get your very own today!… |
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My Pizza: The Easy No-Knead Way to Make Spectacular Pizza at Home $12.00 Make homemade pizza that exceeds your wildest expectations—yet couldn’t be simpler—with Jim Lahey’s groundbreaking no-knead dough and inventive toppings. The secret to incredible pizza is a superb crust—one that is crisp yet chewy, and slightly charred around the edges. Jim Lahey, the baking genius behind New York City’s celebrated Sullivan Street Bakery and Co. pizza re… |
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Tasting Beer: An Insider’s Guide to the World’s Greatest Drink $10.30 A celebration of the world’s most popular beverage spotlights more than fifty international beer styles, revealing how each brew is affected by recipe formulation, brewhouse procedures, yeasts, fermentations, carbonation, filtration, packaging, and other Title: Tasting BeerAuthor: Mosher, RandyPublisher: Workman Pub CoPublication Date: 2009/02/11Number of Pages: 247Binding Type: PAPERBACKLibrary o… |
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The Beer Book $11.99 A comprehensive overview of world beers and brewing furnishes information on more than one thousand breweries and two thousand beers, and includes a discussion of the history of beer, types of beer, and the development of different brewing techniques.Title: The Beer BookAuthor: Hampson, Tim (CON)/ Hieronymus, Stan (CON)/ Obalski, Werner (CON)/ Gilmour, Alastair (CON)/ Pattyn,Publisher: Dk PubPubli… |
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Tasting Beer: $11.18 Tasting Beer |
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Beer Tasting Tool Kit: $16.96 Beer Tasting Tool Kit |
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Tasting Beer: An Insider's Guide to the World's Greatest Drink $14.36 Beer. It's the most popular drink in the world. Enjoyed at ballparks, in home-away-from-home pubs, on the family room sofa, and in every kind of restaurant, beer is at ease in any setting. For all beer lovers who have known the pleasure of draining a pint, Randy Mosher explores and explains the complete tasting experience as it applies to all the wonderful brews of the world. Beer may be the common beverage of the people, but it is far from simple. With 10,000 years of history, more than 900 identified flavors, dozens of styles, and thousands of breweries around the world, beer is as complex as its grape-based neighbors in the liquor stores. It is an artistic creation, brewed from dozens of possible ingredients and processed in hundreds of different ways. Mosher guides readers to a better understanding of how every batch of beer is affected by each of the brewmaster's choices - recipe formulation, brewhouse procedures, yeasts, fermentations, carbonation, filtration, packaging, and much more. Beer can be light, dark, mild, strong, flat, or fizzy. Hundreds of tastes can be detected in beer, from resin to toast, and from apple to smoke. Readers will learn how to identify the scents, colors, flavors, and mouth-feel of all the major beer styles. There are also chapters on proper serving and storage conditions, and classic beer and food pairings. The second half of the book is a style-by-style compendium of the different brews within major beer families, including American craft brews, British lagers, German ales, and Belgian Dubbels. For each style there are historical and regional facts, taste and aroma characteristics, seasonal availability, food pairings, and a few terrific recommendations for readers to sample. From the back cover: Everybody knows how to drink beer, but few know how to really taste it. "Tasting Beer "is a lively exploration of the culture, chemistry, and creativity that make craft beers so wonderfully complex. Heighten your enjoyment of every glass with an understanding of the finer points of brewing, serving, tasting, and food pairing. Praise: "A radical passion for brews." -Bob Townsend, "Atlanta Constitutional-Journal" |
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Beer $15 From fashionable bars to traditional pubs, a new generation of connoisseur is discovering the variety and diversity of beers from around the world, from the brewing heartlands of Europe to the new world beers of the Far East and Latin America. Whether you are looking to find out more about the brewing and history your favorite beer or want to discover a hidden gem that you've never tried, this book tells and shows you everything you need to know from comprehensive tasting notes to how to choose and serve each beer correctly. As the world’s best-selling writer on beer, Michael Jackson needs no introduction. He is renowned the world over for his pithy wisdom and good sense. Michael has written numerous books on the subjects of beer and whisky, and has won many awards, including 1999 Glenfiddich Drinks Writer of the Year and the James Beard Foundation Award for Best Wine or Spirits Book in 2006 for Whisky. He is member of the Belgian Confederation of Brewers, the only non-brewer to be honored. Jackson is also a journalist, and writes regularly for a variety of publications, including Whisky magazine, The Washington Post, and a number of websites. A uniquely illustrated, portable guide to beers from all over the world Includes tasting notes, explaining why different beers taste the way they do Gives information on the top producers from around the word Introduces readers to famous and not-so-famous beers |
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Beer Tasting Tool Kit $24.95 Discover the nuances of artisan beers from lagers and ales to porters and stouts. The tasting profiles featured in the booklet break down beer into style categories and include information on each variety (background, flavors, aromas, and unique character). Cover your bottles with the included paper sleeves to conduct blind tastings, and record tasting notes. A world of beer awaits! Contains a 48-page book, kraft paper covers, string and other contents stored in a sturdy cardboard box. Size - 7" x 9 1/2" x 2" |
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Lady Tasting Tea $18.1 An insightful, revealing history of the magical mathematics that transformed our world. At a summer tea party in Cambridge, England, a guest states that tea poured into milk tastes different from milk poured into tea. Her notion is shouted down by the scientific minds of the group. But one man, Ronald Fisher, proposes to scientifically test the hypothesis. There is no better person to conduct such an experiment, for Fisher is a pioneer in the field of statistics. "The Lady Tasting Tea" spotlights not only Fisher's theories but also the revolutionary ideas of dozens of men and women which affect our modern everyday lives. Writing with verve and wit, David Salsburg traces breakthroughs ranging from the rise and fall of Karl Pearson's theories to the methods of quality control that rebuilt postwar Japan's economy, including a pivotal early study on the capacity of a small beer cask at the Guinness brewing factory. Brimming with intriguing tidbits and colorful characters, "The Lady Tasting Tea" salutes the spirit of those who dared to look at the world in a new way. |
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The Beer Journal $11.88 The first ever tool to chart your journey through the landscape of handcrafted beers. Fully illustrated with over a hundred pages to record your tastings, The Beer Journal is perfect for traveling, to give as a gift to your favorite tasting partner, or to keep track of every unusual, delicious, and memorable beer that you find in pubs, at beer festivals, and on brewery tours. It also includes information on how to create your own beer cellar and how to develop and document your own beer pairings. |
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Beer Laminate Reference Charts $3.95 Compact version. Spillproof guide to beer. Know your beer...Types, flavors, country of origin and much more. x0D; Multi-fold laminated guide covers: - beer basics - history of beer - beer in America - basic ingredients - the perfect pour - beer tasting - 29 different beer styles - beer brewing & terminology - beer myths x0D; x0D; |

The Hobby for Beer Lovers
Do you love beer? Are you thinking of getting into beer brewing because you love drinking beer? You may think that brewing your own beer is a little over the top. But in truth, starting to brew your own beer at home is a great hobby. It can be a very creative approach to the love of fine beer. Brewing your own is easier then you ever imagined; with a readily available Beer Brewing Kit, and a little knowledge you can get from reading some of the many beer brewing books available, you can be on your way to making your first batch of beer at home!
There is a large difference between a real beer lover, and a typical "guzzler". Beer in fact has a rich history, and the variety and uniqueness of flavors, textures, and blends is almost as vast and strong as wine. As we know wine connoisseurs have a very good knowledge of wine, and can tell a fine wine when they taste one, the move towards making beer can make you a beer connoisseur, involved in the culture of beer, someone that seeks the finest in flavors, the side that seeks to gain a rich insight into beer, by making it, and improving every time they do. This is what differentiates a real beer lover from the regular old beer "guzzler".
By encouraging yourself to become a beer connoisseur, to develop this new found passion for brewing, you are emphasizing the noble and creative side of your love for beer. Besides information learned from some of the best beer brewing books, you can learn a lot from your local brewing store. There are many clubs dedicated to brewing fine beer. Once you get started, your passion for beer becomes more about improving the quality and taste of your beer, rather than just drinking it.
Along with the creative side of brewing your own beer, there are also some economic benefits to it. As with everything that can be purchased, beer prices keep going up. But the costs of making your own beer at home are amazingly low if you break it all down to cost per glass of beer you brew. Of course, there is the equipment you need to buy. But the cost of that is not prohibitive; you do not need a large vat and other shiny equipment used at large breweries. In fact, you only need a basic beer brewing kit, which is basically a scaled down version of the large breweries. And the cost for these kits is very affordable; you can have your own beer production factory in your own home for $100 to $200, taking up very little space at that. And then, when you see how much beer you can make per batch, that it is a very smart investment.
It's not out of the question for you to develop your beer brewing abilities to a very high level, becoming a true Brewmeister. In that case, you could even find a market for your beer. Today, the microbrew culture is very large, and getting even larger. Many pubs and bars specialize in quality microbrews, and often times sell quality home made beers. So if you can develop you skills, and create a fine, unique tasting beer, and bottle it, you may be able to even sell it to those pubs and bars. This could cover the cost of your equipment and supplies, and even turn you a profit. A profit from doing something fun and enjoyable!
These are just a few reasons to start making your own beer. Are you a family person? Beer making can become a family affair, and a wonderful way to have fun together. Imagine the possibilities, they are endless. Don't wait, start your home brewery today!
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