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100 Ways to Be Pasta

Perfect Pasta Recipes from Gangivecchio

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
For us, pasta is more than just a food. It is part of our histories. It is a good friend, a member of the family. It is something we love . . . When Italians offer a plate of pasta to friends or strangers, we are opening the doors of our homes and welcoming them inside in the most generous way. It is in that spirit that my mamma and I, who have had the good fortune to be accompanied all our lives by this most versatile of foods, invite you through the tall, ancient wooden doors of Gangivecchio and offer up these recipes, these one hundred versions of the golden strands, the god, pasta, to you. So put the water on to boil. And buon appetito! —Giovanna Tornabene, from her Introduction
Welcome back to Gangivecchio, where Wanda and Giovanna Tornabene, two-time James Beard Award winners and beloved doyennes of the Italian kitchen, have served up another irresistible helping of charm, wit, and culinary wisdom from the kitchen of the thirteenth-century abbey they call home. This time around, the dynamic mother-daughter duo takes us back to Sicilian basics, in a recipe-filled compendium and heartfelt tribute to the “queen of the Italian table”—pasta.
In 100 Ways to Be Pasta the Tornabenes once again weave memoir and history together with the vivid flavors of local village life, bringing us a true taste of Sicilian culture and cuisine. They incorporate lessons from basic pasta-cooking techniques to secret tips from old masters, and include an extensive glossary of pasta vocabulary, a dictionary of pasta types, and of course a generous sprinkling of anecdotes and advice.
All of this serves as a delightful setting for the one hundred authentic, mouth-watering recipes, lovingly honed and perfected in the old abbey kitchen. From quick, easy basics, like spaghetti with garlic, oil, and hot pepper or farfalle with peas and prosciutto, to traditional pasta soups like minestrone, to more elaborate baked and stuffed pastas like Baked Orecchiette with Lamb Ragù and Melted Mozzarella or Baked Timbale of Anelletti with Veal and Vegetables, each recipe serves up a little piece of Sicily for your very own kitchen.
As informative and useful to the beginner as to the experienced Italian cook, 100 Ways to Be Pasta is a must-have and a treasure for any cookbook shelf.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 9, 2005
      Pasta's very simplicity can sometimes trip up cookbook authors. After all, how many recipes for spaghetti with tomato sauce does one need? Mother and daughter Wanda and Giovanna Tornabene easily skirt this issue with inventive dishes such as Tagliolini with Green Apple Pesto and Speck, and Ditaloni with Eggplant Balls, Potato, and Pancetta. To coauthor Carreño's credit, the voices of these two women, who run a restaurant in a 13th-century Sicilian abbey, remain genuine and convincing throughout. They demonstrate that cuisine can be inventive without involving backbreaking labor: in a recipe for Bucatini with Dried Figs, for example, they explain that they purchase dried figs rather than drying their own, "a boring and tedious task." In a charming sidebar, they describe the pasta they prepare for their dogs and cats twice a day. There's a distinct Sicilian flavor throughout, which means less of an emphasis on handmade egg pasta (Papa's Ricotta Ravioli with Simple Butter Sauce is one exception) and an homage to the classic Lampedusa novel The Leopard
      in the form of a timballo that mimics one served in a prince's home in the novel, as well as a version of Sicily's Famous Spaghetti with Eggplant and Ricotta Salata. Recipes are clearly written and divided into types, such as rich pasta, one-dish pasta, soup with pasta, etc. The Tornabenes'La Cucina Siciliana di Gangivecchio
      (Knopf, 1996) and Sicilian Home Cooking
      (Knopf, 2001) were James Beard Award winners; this new addition looks like another potential champion.

    • Library Journal

      August 15, 2005
      Gangivecchio is the rustic country restaurant that the Tornabenes (mother and daughter) opened in their ancient Sicilian home almost 30 years ago. Despite its isolated location, it somewhat improbably gained an international following, and the authors have written two other cookbooks about this special place. Here, they write that for them, "pasta is a live thing." "More than just a food," daughter Giovanna says, "pasta is part of our histories." With freelancer Carreñ o ("Once Upon a Tart"), they have translated this history into written recipes, some familiar, many of them less so: Linguine with Scallions, Raisins, and Turmeric; Spaghetti with Sea Urchin; and Pappardelle with Asparagus, Walnuts, and Speck. While this book does not seem to have quite the same resonance as the earlier two, fans of Gangivecchio and the Tornabenes will be delighted to have this personal collection of their favorite pasta recipes. For most libraries.

      Copyright 2005 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2005
      Now that the low-carb diet craze is winding down, pasta's perennial popularity places it back on both home and restaurant tables. Part of pasta's charm is its utter adaptability. It can be eaten hot, cold, baked, in soup, or simply sauced. The great diversity of pasta shapes adds visual variety to these diverse cooking methods. The hundred variations given here by celebrated Sicilian cooks seem barely to touch the surface. The Tornabenes focus on both traditional and contemporary Sicilian ways of dealing with pasta. They serve spaghetti with eggplant chunks and ricotta " salata" in imitation of Mount Etna's snowy volcanic peaks. They top tagliolini with intriguing green apple pesto. Another variation uses five different nut meats to create a pesto ideal for short pasta. Even potatoes figure in these pastas, one dish combining them with sausage, another using them in ravioli stuffing. A regal dish combines lobster with sparkling Italian wine to sauce orecchiette. Cooks everywhere will find inspiring ideas here to feed both families and guests.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2005, American Library Association.)

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