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A Sense of Place

A journey around Scotland's whisky
BookHardcover
EUR49,00

Product description

'A Sense of Place blends pin-sharp writing with evocative photography in a book to savour and treasure.' - Ian Rankin

'Mr. Broom, who was born in Glasgow and has been writing about spirits for decades, is the perfect author for this beautiful, evocative book. He knows the whisky territory intimately and the people well, and he has the senses of wonder, empathy and history to tie them altogether, as well as the skill to conjure up the smell of the salt air, the sound of barley shimmering in the wind, the vibrations of hammers shaping copper into stills and the singe of the oak staves as a cooper bends them over fire...With beautiful photography by Christina Kernohan, this is the book to give any lover of single malt, along with a bottle of their favorite whisky.' The Year's Best Books on Wine (and Whisky), The New York Times

'Beautifully written and illustrated.' Fiona Beckett, the Guardian
'This is an engaging, humane and important book. I cannot recommend it too strongly.' Charlie MacLean Keeper Magazine

'A book so beautifully tweedy I actually want to wear it as a hat. I am very glad it includes a map as Dave's authoritative guide has given me many great whisky-holiday ideas.' Damian Barr

'Dave Broom's whisky odyssey is in many ways a story of Scotland and the questions we face....Like a good dram, it's complex, and Dave makes an excellent guide... Christina Kernohan's beautiful photographs of the places and people featured in the book add texture and vibrancy to the stories: a window into the distilleries and lives of the craftspeople.' Best of Scotland

'Few can match [Broom's] ability to blend together critical thinking, insight and industry knowledge while giving the resulting mix a romantic twist.' Whisky Magazine

In this beautifully crafted narrative, award-winning writer Dave Broom examines Scotch whisky from the point of view of its terroir - the land, weather, history, craft and culture that feed and enhance the whisky itself. Travelling around his native Scotland and visiting distilleries from Islay and Harris to Orkney and Speyside, Dave explores the whiskies made there and the elements in their distilling, and locality, which make them what they are. Along the way he tells the story of whisky's history and considers what whisky is now, and where it is going.

With stunning specially commissioned photography by Christina Kernohan, A Sense of Place will enhance and deepen every whisky drinker's understanding of just what is in their glass.
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Details

ISBN/GTIN978-1-78472-671-3
Product TypeBook
BindingHardcover
Publishing date29/09/2022
Pages256 pages
LanguageEnglish
Weight1260 g
Article no.21203666
CatalogsZeitfracht
Data source no.N3000001506745
Product groupBU458
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Ich habe erst sehr spät angefangen Kaffee zu trinken aber seitdem entdecke ich eine ganz neue Welt des Genusses! Ich liebe das heiß gebrühte Getränk als Cappuccino, Latte, Frappé, im Tiramisu, als Likör oder auf Eis ...
und finde es ganz wunderbar durch die Straßen Berlins zu ziehen und die schönsten und gemütlichsten Cafés zu entdecken.
Mit 'Spill the Beans' hat Lani Kingston ein perfektes Kaffeekompendium für Kaffeeliebhaber|Innen* zusammengestellt. Der wunderschön gestaltete Bildband verbindet brillante Bilder mit faszinierenden Fakten rund um die Zauberbohne. Wir bekommen einen präzise recherchierten Einblick in Anbau, Ernte, Verarbeitung, Geschichte und Kultur.
Und natürlich enthält der Bildband viele leckere Rezepte aus allen möglichen Ecken der Welt. Eine absolute Empfehlung, um sich für die täglichen Kaffeemomente inspirieren zu lassen.
For much of my adult life (and let's be honest - quite a lot of my teenage life too) I found myself very turned off wine. My politics led me to shun what I felt was a drink for aristocrats and my wallet led me to buy beer in pubs for the simple reason it was a lot cheaper...

At least, those are two of the reasons I would have given in conversation to explain why I tended to always order some hops juice instead of wine. If I am being really honest though, I'll admit to the fact that a certain amount of pride put me off wine. I simply never knew about it to join in educated conversation. For that reason, I was thrilled to discover Jancis Robinson's little book which you really can read in a day and will give you so much of the groundwork for wine-tasting that you will never feel out of place again. I rarely believe books that claim to teach you something at speed but this really worked for me and I still use the knowledge gleaned from it a couple of years later.

Author

Dave Broom has written 13 books, including The World Atlas of Whisky, now in its second edition. He has won many awards, including two Glenfiddich prizes and, in 2013, he won the prestigious IWSC Communicator of the Year Award.  In 2015, he won The Spirited Award for Best Cocktail & Spirits writer, and, in 2018, The Way of Whisky won an Andre Simon prize. In 2020 he was awarded Best Drinks Writer at the Fortnum & Mason awards.

He has been a contributing editor to Whisky Magazine, scotchwhisky,com and Malt Advocate. In 2020 he started his own website thewhiskymanual.uk. He has made two films, Cuba In A Bottle and The Amber Light. The latter, an examination on whisky and Scottish culture, won Best Programme at the 2020 Fortnum & Mason awards.

Over his three-plus decades in the field, Dave has built up a considerable international following with regular training/educational visits to Japan, France, Holland, Scandinavia, Germany, Africa and North America. He is actively involved in whisky education and also acts as a consultant to major distillers on tasting techniques as well as training professionals and the public. Dave has also worked with Suntory in developing a language of tasting that communicates Japanese concepts to English speaking audiences.

Dave's previous books also include Whisky: The Manual, Gin: The Manual, Rum: The Manual and The Way of Whisky.

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