Saturday, January 31, 2009

Sybil Unrest

To add to the list of books to read in 2009: Sybil Unrest, co-authored by Larissa Lai and Rita Wong. Interesting review here.

I wrote my MA essay about Larissa Lai's last novel, Salt Fish Girl. Consequentially, I've probably combed through those words of hers more than that of any other text. So it's been a couple of years and I'm excited to read her words again.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Book Watch

A few friends and I recently decided to start a book club. What began as suggestions for our first book club book turned into a list of books I'd like to read this year. Included are:



  • 2666 by Roberto Bolano (The other members of the book club thought that a three-volume book was too much for our first book--funny, that.)

  • The White Tiger by Aravind Adiga (Sounds like a page-turner; won the Man Booker prize in 2008).

  • Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell (Because I need to throw in some non-fiction once in a while.)

  • Stunt by Claudia Dey (Sounds like something slightly akin to Lullabies for Little Criminals, which I loved.)

  • Cockroach by Rawi Hage (Because I'm curious to check his writing out for myself after hearing so much hype and even a bit of controversy.)

  • American Wife: A Novel by Curtis Sittenfeld (Because I devoured Prep and have heard that this one is equally as good, though of course with a very different protagonist/subject matter.)

  • How to Buy A Love of Reading by Tanya Gibson (Because it's been compared to Special Topics in Calamity Physics, which I loved.)

  • Stripmalling by Jon Paul Fiorentino (Very funny stuff, and because I'm slightly obsessed with anything I consider "genre-bending"--usually poetry/novel, but in this case novel/graphic novel.)

  • God of Missed Connections by Elizabeth Bachinsky (Because I've loved all the other poetry books by this very talented and entertaining lady.)

The Pilot reading at Blizzarts last night was also full of good material. I'm quite excited about Angela Szczepaniak's novel-in-poems (again with the genre-bending) Unisex Love Poems. And Eva Moran's reading from her new book Porny Stories really had me laughing out loud, and from what I can tell so far is as well-written as it is funny.

Speaking of funny, check out an except from Jon Paul Fiorentino's new novel over at Joyland.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Wine Tasting Aromas

Last week two co-worker friends and I started a wine tasting class, Initiation à la Dégustation, through the Amicale des Sommeliers de Québec. The course is in French, which means that I've been trying to reconcile English and French wine terminology in my head and occasionally lean over to whisper something like, "What's moelleux in English?" (It turns out that there isn't really a single word translation.)

As we tasted the wines, we consulted a sheet full of different wine aroma descriptors. I doubt that I would think of many of these things without the sheet in front of me... Rubber? Kerosene? Cat piss?!

This got me thinking about a poster I'd seen in one of the wineries in Mendoza. It featured all the most common wine aroma descriptors with a picture of each one inside an empty wine glass. A little creative googling, and here it is.

Now if only I had room for a framed version of that on the kitchen wall beside my (very modest) wine collection and the two beautiful decanters I got from my lovely girlfriends for Christmas.

Thursday, January 01, 2009

Mendoza Mendoza

Unbelievably, it’s been over a month (almost two by now, in fact) since I got back from Argentina. I only recently got a new computer to replace the one that died part way through my trip though, which means that I missed out on blogging about some of my favourite parts of the trip.

Once we left the rather harsh weather conditions of Patagonia (I have memories of running down the dirt road from the restaurant back to the hostel because it was so cold and windy), we hopped on a plane back to Buenos Aires. We had planned to go into the city and take an overnight bus to Mendoza, but on a whim we stopped by the ticket counter on our way out of the airport. They offered us a decent price on a flight leaving an hour or two later, so I bought my first last-minute airline ticket at an airport.

On our first full day in Mendoza we did an organized tour in the afternoon, visiting two wineries and a place where they made olive oil and dried fruit. (I bought a very small sample bottle of olive oil to bring home and though I’ve been savouring it, it’s almost gone and now I wish I’d bought more - delicious.) All the wineries around Mendoza are actually in outlying neighborhoods, not in Mendoza proper. We visited Chacras de Coria, Maipu, and Lujan de Cuyo. It was quite interesting to learn a bit more about the process and see the big barrels and cellars.

But for me the highlight of that day was our trip to the Vines of Mendoza tasting room when we got back into town. As if we hadn’t had enough wine that day (actually we’d only had a few samples), we ordered a tasting flight of Argentine reds and a platter of cheese. We sat at the bar, and our knowledgeable server, a Mendocino girl around our age, told us about each wine. My favourite was the Pulenta Estates Merlot 2005, which was said to have hints of eucalyptus and mint.

Afterwards we stumbled over to Ampora Wine Tours to book a day-long tour for the next day. I was delighted to see that Pulenta Estates winery was on the itinerary.

The next morning our tour guide Luciana (who, by the way, was excellent - super friendly and fun) picked us up at our hotel. First, we visited a bodega boutique called Clos de Chacras. It felt a bit strange to taste wines at 9am, but hey, you do what you have to do. We sat on couches in the tasting room and, for those of us who were new to tasting, learned about how to stick your nose in the glass and smell, swirl, and then smell again to get the secondary aromas. Tasty wines here - Caro and I both bought a bottle to bring home.

Next was my personal favourite, Pulenta Estate. I loved every wine we tried there and had a hard time deciding which one to buy to bring home. Then we headed on to Ruca Malen, where instead of doing a tour we sat down on a beautiful terrace in the winery's backyard to a five-course lunch. Each course had a wine pairing. I wasn't quite as crazy about the wine there, but the food was delicious. The main course was steak, which was probably the best I had on the whole trip. For dessert there was a cream cheesecake with dulce de leche - I don't usually go for such things, but it was heavenly.

Lastly, once we could barely see straight, we went to the Bodega Benegas, where I was introduced to the sangiovese grape for the first time.

Needless to say, by the time we boarded an overnight bus back to Buenos Aires later that evening, I didn't have a hard time dozing off.