Molto Italiano: 327 Simple Italian Recipes To Cook At Home
By (Author) Mario Batali
HarperCollins Publishers Inc
HarperCollins
3rd May 2005
United States
General
Non Fiction
641.5945
Winner of James Beard Foundation Book Awards (International) 2006
Hardback
528
Width 197mm, Height 241mm, Spine 36mm
1428g
"The trick to cooking is that there is no trick." Mario Batali
The only mandatory Italian cookbook for the home cook, Mario Batali's Molto Italiano is rich in local lore, with Batali's humorous and enthusiastic voice, familiar to those who have come to know him on his popular Food Network programs, larded through about 220 recipes of simple, healthy, seasonal Italian cooking for the American audience.
Easy to use and simple to read, some of these recipes will be those "as seen" on TV in the eight years of "Molto Mario" programs on the Food Network, including those from "Mediterranean Mario," "Mario Eats Italy," and the allnew "Ciao America with Mario Batali." Batali's distinctive voice will provide a historical and cultural perspective with a humorous bent to demystify even the more elaborate dishes as well as showing ways to shorten or simplify everything from the purchasing of good ingredients to preproduction and countdown schedules of holiday meals. Informative head notes will include bits about the provenance of the recipes and the odd historical fact.
Mario Batali's Molto Italiano will feature ten soups, thirty antipasti (many vegetarian or vegetable based), forty pasta dishes representing many of the twentyone regions of Italy, twenty fish and shellfish dishes, twenty chicken dishes, twenty pork or lamb dishes and twenty side dishes, each of which can be served as a light meal. Add twenty desserts and a foundation of basic formation recipes and this book will be the only Italian cooking book needed in the home cook's library.
Raised in Seattle, MARIO BATALIs initial career path had him studying Spanish theater at Rutgers University. Soon after graduating he began his culinary training at Le Cordon Bleu in London, from which he withdrew almost immediately due to a lack of interest. An apprenticeship with Londons legendary chef Marco Pierre White and training in an Italian village gave him the essential skills and knowledge to return to the U.S to begin his restaurant empire.