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Hardcover Lidia's Italy: 140 Simple and Delicious Recipes from the Ten Places in Italy Lidia Loves Most: A Cookbook Book

ISBN: 1400040361

ISBN13: 9781400040360

Lidia's Italy: 140 Simple and Delicious Recipes from the Ten Places in Italy Lidia Loves Most: A Cookbook

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

Featuring 140 mouthwatering new recipes, a gastronomic journey of the Italian regions that have inspired and informed Lidia Bastianich's legendary cooking. For the home cook and the armchair traveler... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

YUM

If you want some authentic Italian recipes they are here. I thought I cooked it all but I learned alot from this book. It is the first cookbook I have bought in a few years. All of them are so repetitive. This one gives you some new ideas.

Not surprising...

...I own all of Lidia's books, watch her shows and have become a better cook because of her. This book not only has simple and delicious recipes, it also has the nice addition of art history. Beautiful design, pictures, too.

Another masterpiece from Lidia

Without a doubt, another fine labor of love and respect of Italian cooking from our Lidia. Knowing where to begin to describe this voluminous compilation of culinary joy is difficult, in that there is much to tell. Allow me to begin with its intention. Lidia has covered 10 regions within the cultural offerings of her beloved Italy, and while she gives the reader a gastronomic tour, her lovely daughter, Tanya, gives the historical tour, which was an excellent melting of the two grand reasons to appreciate this culture. To be sure, Tanya has a Ph.D of Renaissance history from Oxford University, and you come away with a deeper appreciation of Italy and the recipes that her mother has offered. This rather heavy book has superb photography of prepared dishes, ingredients in the raw, spectacular views of the Italian countryside, as well as some of the charming people that she has known along the way, and along the years. Perhaps this is something of a "family" album, if you will. The regions covered are Istria, Trieste, Friuli, Padova and Treviso, Piemonte, Maremma, Rome, Naples, Sicily, and Puglia. In beginning each regional chapter, Lidia begins with a listing of the recipes contained within, then gives her own little introduction to the territory. As she presents each recipe, she gives another small introduction that will either give a sort of educational mention, or perhaps a cooking hint. At the end of the chapter, Tanya brings it to a close with "Tanya's Tour" in which she breaks down the region with specific areas of interest and notables, and gives the reader an incredible short education of history and information. There are 140 recipes within this tome, and they are covered within the seven categories of: APPETIZERS SOUPS SALADS, SIDE DISHES, and CONDIMENTS PASTAS AND RISOTTOS FISH AND SEAFOOD MEAT and POULTRY DESSERTS It would be a much longer review if I mentioned each specific recipe, but I believe it would suffice to say that, knowing Lidia and her passion for the true art of culinary creations, they would all be delicious. Besides, I am sure that you could find someone for each dish who would be most grateful for your labor of love, courtesy of Lidia. Having purchased all of her books, I have been most pleased to serve so many of her dishes to very happy guests, and never have I been disappointed. Lidia herself has degrees in food chemistry and such, so her fountain of knowledge is backed with science as well as love of this artform. And to add a final note, a listing of the dishes made on her new PBS series, "Lidia's Italy", is presented at the end of the book, listing the recipes made on each show and from which region they come. You are also given her sources for some of the fine foods she uses, which include stores and websites. As our grand dame of Italian culinary creations always tell us, "tutti a tavola per mangiare". Ciao!

I just thought I was a good cook!

I have been considered a good cook for most of my life. Mama Lidia has increased one of my best qualities, exponentially. To be watching one of her PBS shows, with the cookbook that accompanies it on my knee, is empowering. Lidia would be the ideal way for a beginner cook to get off to a spectacular start. But be warned! Once you feed people you can't get rid of them. What your Mother told you about stray puppies and kittens applies to people too.

Excellent Culinary Travelogue and PBS Tie-in. Buy It.

`Lidia's Italy' by PBS Italian Cooking teacher extraordinare, Lidia Matticchio Bastianich and daughter, Tanya Bastianich Manuali, is another entry in one of those `little trends' in cookbooks which swirl about in eddies running off the greater currents of national cuisines (Italian, French, Mexican, Spanish, Thai, you name it), regional cuisines (mostly Italian, Spanish, and American), fast cooking (Rachael Ray and company), grilling, low carb, and what have you. This mini-genre deals with personal tours of culinary highlights through various venues in Italy. The two earlier heavyweights in this recent trend are `Biba's Italy' by notable restauranteur and cookbook writer, Biba Caggiano and `jamie's italy' by `The Naked Chef', Jamie Oliver. Both books impressed me, but for somewhat different reasons. Caggiano gave us the insider's catalogue of recipes for great classic Italian dishes, while the effervescent Oliver gives us the brilliant outsider's enthusiasm for seeing Italian cuisine with fresh eyes. Bastianich's book is naturally more similar to `Biba's Italy', since both are professional cooks who were born and raised in Italy. All three are great foodie books, but Bastianich's book appeals to me over Caggiano for three reasons. But before I get into these, let me give you the lay of the land in `Lidia's Italy'. While Mama Lidia does the culinary tour of ten (10) of her favorite venues, daughter Tanya, a highly educated guide of cultural tours through Italy does verbal snapshots of historical and artistic places of interest at each of these venues. I will not address Tanya's contribution except to say that while it did add value to the book, it does not contribute much to my appreciation. It may have had a bigger impression on me if pictures of the sites were included. For me, this book is primarily about the recipes of these regions. The ten regions are: Istria, the peninsula east of Venice and Lidia's ancestral home, which is now part of Croatia Trieste, the Italian city at the northern end of the Adriatic, which for centuries belonged to Austria/Hungary Friuli, the center of the second most interesting culinary venue in Italy, after Emilia-Romagna Padova and Treviso, inland from the city of Venice Piedmonte, with the cities of Turia and Alba, near France, and `truffle central' for the world. Maremma, in southern Tuscany, the site of the Bastianich' newest vineyard. Rome, the traditional slaughterhouse of Italy, and `artichoke central'. Naples, which needs no introduction to American lovers of Italian food. Western Sicily, including Palermo, Trapani, and Marsala, the home of the Italian sherry. Puglia, the Italian bread basket and a heavy olive producer. Famous for its breads. The first thing I like about the book is that seven (7) out of ten (10) of these regions are on the fringes of Italian culinary terroir, which means they reflect more outside influences than the typical `Italian-American' fare based on Tuscan, Roman, and Neapolitan
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