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A dedicated wine book isn't mandatory, but if you set your keys on it during a tasting you're not liable to leave it behind. Also, in theory you can keep several volumes over the years and collect them on your bookshelf. And while taking notes on a laptop can be expeditious, there's always that worry about spillage. A few bucks worth of Chardonnay can turn a $1000 laptop into a $0 paperweight. It doesn't matter if you have a wine blog or merely enjoy wine--if you take a few minutes to transcribe your thoughts about each bottle you try, you'll learn a lot about wine within a year.
One such printed wine book is The Wine Journal by Jennifer McCartney. $10.36, Skyhorse Publishing, 272 pages.
The first 30 pages are just some basic wine terms and a few quotes. The remainder of the book is comprised of pages set up for taking notes.
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The pages in this book are glossy stock, thicker than regular book pages. What you're writing on is the kaolin coating, not the wood-based paper itself. I could get into a whole discussion on substrates, but this isn't a printing blog and I'm not going to go into how tentacular polymers adhere to certain stocks. Let's just say that my background in printing means that I know a lot about paper and ink. I wrote on the page using five different common writing tools: Sharpie, pencil, mechanical pencil, ballpoint pen, gel ink pen. I let everything sit with the book open for 30 minutes, did a smear test with my thumb, and everything worked except for the gel. The rollerball style pens are going to smear on this kind of stock.
That being said, I like the size and look of this book--it will fit into your pants pockets or purse, and there's enough room in the various categories to write out what you're tasting. Particularly "Shared With"--it's something I often leave off the blog for privacy reasons, but it's nice to look back over your notes and remember with whom you enjoyed a certain bottle. Consider this another possible wine gift for the upcoming Christmas season, especially for those wine lovers who are just starting out.
Note: This book was received as a sample.
3 comments:
Having a wine journal is a good idea, and something I've always meant to take up. I have a little notebook I keep with me for that purpose, but I hardly ever get it out when I'm tasting in public!
As a sentimental, I love the idea of writing down who you taste with, it's great for when you look back over the notes months and years later. What I do along those lines is write on the cork from the wine the names of the folks I shared it with, and the date, and keep the corks in a lovely glass vase. And sometimes I actually pour them all of the vase and look at each of them and have a memory fest! Of course, Stelvin closures make that a little more challenging. ;)
Kimberly,
That's a great idea for keeping the old corks! I throw all of mine into an old box in my closet. Don't know what I'm ever going to do with them, but it's a habit at this point.
Most of the time I use a tattered old moleskine notebook. I've got a really beautiful hardback, leather-bound wine journal that I got as a gift from a friend, but it's so nice that I feel bad writing in it sometimes. This little one that I wrote about is a good compromise, and it's not that expensive. Plus, it will last you for around 250 wines or so.
Cheers,
Benito
It seems like a wrth reading book for me :), thanks for reviewing.
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