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Fagioli: The Bean Cuisine of Italy
 
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Fagioli: The Bean Cuisine of Italy [Hardcover]

Judith Barrett (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 9, 2004
From thick, rich minestrone with beans and vegetables, to delectable chickpea fritters, here are 124 easy-to-prepare, delicious, authentic favorites-in the only cookbook devoted solely to the glories of Italian bean cookery

Satisfying, nutritious, wonderfully adaptable, and one of the least expensive forms of protein, beans are an integral part of the cuisines of cultures all over the globe. This is especially true in Italy today, where you can find hundreds of bean recipes from nearly every region and where, for most families, eating beans is as fundamental as eating pasta. In Fagioli, the co-author of the best-selling cookbook Risotto celebrates the bean cuisine of Italy in all its splendid variety and versatility.

Here you will find:
- Bean Basics-everything you need to know to cook and enjoy beans, including a guide to the most common beans in Italy and their American counterparts

- Ingredient Guide-information on the special Italian or hard-to-find ingredients, what they are, and how you can purchase them through mail-order and online resources

-·124 authentic dishes-both traditional and new-providing flavorful and creative ways to prepare beans: in antipasti and salads; in soups; with grains including polenta, barley, and faro; with pasta; and in hearty entrees prepared with meats, including sausages, game, beef, lamb, and pork.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Judith Barrett, is a food writer and the author of five cookbooks; her most recent, Saved by Soup, was nominated for both a James Beard and an IACP book award. She is also the co-author of the best-selling Risotto. Her work has appeared in several national publications. She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Rodale Books (September 9, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1579547249
  • ISBN-13: 978-1579547240
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #797,500 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

63 of 65 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A perfectly delightful book of Italian Bean Recipes. Super, December 14, 2004
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This review is from: Fagioli: The Bean Cuisine of Italy (Hardcover)
`Fagioli' by professional cookbook writer Judith Barrett is quite clearly subtitled `The Bean Cuisine of Italy', as it is all about cooking with Italian beans.

This book immediately succeeds at the first and most important task of a special purpose cookbook in that it has made be really care about and be interested in its subject. It accomplishes this feat first by being a very attractively designed hardcover book with a very well sewn binding which nicely lays flat where you want it to. Next, it's modest artwork and typography complements its presentation so that it is simply a pleasure to read. No eye strain here. Congratulations to the Rodale Press for packaging a very nice volume. Finally, the all the introductory material is accurate to the best of my knowledge. There are no lingering myths about the risks of salting cooking beans, there is no doctrinaire approach to having to soak beans, and there is a tolerance, with warnings, about using a pressure cooker to cook beans, as the sine qua non of bean cookery is like barbecue, `low and slow'. The only hint of elitism I detected was the statement that somehow, the Italians have mastered a secret to a tasty cooking of beans which is beyond we poor New World neophytes who have been cooking beans for less than 400 years. I will concede that the knowledge of good bean cooking is probably a bit harder to find outside of Boston, but I think we have the hang of it.

One of the most liberating revelations was the fact that Italians actually cook a lot with dried beans imported from the New World, as North America exports much more than it consumes, and Italy consumes all it produces, so no dried Italian beans sit on the grocery shelves beyond a year of harvest, especially as date of production is stamped on the bean packages just as we do for bread and milk.

While my hero, Alton Brown has remarked that bean cooking is remarkably uniform, far more consistent across species than with grains, he certainly did not take into account the variety of beans covered by this book, which deals with at least fifteen (15) different species of beans, some of which have no substitutes if the real thing is not available. Fortunately, the unique varieties of beans, the chickpea and the fava are commonly available in the United States. Every other type of bean has more than one commonly available substitution, which is important since there are some beans which are available only in Italy and which do not travel well.

The recipes are organized in exactly the way one would expect from an Italian cookery subject, with chapters on:

Primi Piatti, divided into sections on Antipasti, Insalate, and Contorni (Side Dishes)
Zuppa di Fagioli, divided into sections on Minestre, Zuppe (Thick Soups), and Passali (Creamy Soups)
Pasta e Fagioli, of course
Secondi Piatti, divided into Fagioli e Farinacci (Grains), Fagioli con Carne (Meat), Fagioli con Selvaggina (Poultry), and Fagioli con Pesce (Seafood)

I have never, up until today, been quite clear on the difference between Minestre and Zuppa. I always thought of Minestre as a relatively thick soup, especially as prepared in Florence, for example, but the Tuscan bean soup recipe trumps all visions of soupy thickness by including six different varieties of beans.

This division of recipes does not mean there is no seafood in the salads or antipasti. In fact, the salads include tuna, shrimp, and octopus as co-conspirators in the salad recipes.

This book gives an excellent discussion of non-bean ingredients for its size and does the especially good service of telling us where we can get these ingredients at the same place where their use is discussed. This may not be the best arrangement when we pick up the book later as a reference, but it gives a very good sense of how easy or how hard it is to get some of these things such as bottarga, guanciale, and porcinis.

One could argue that if you have a library full of books by Marcella Hazan, Lydia Bastianich, and a platoon of other Italian cooking writers, what do you need with this book? My first answer is that unlike most general works written for Americans, it tells you what kind of beans are actually used in these recipes. Next, like every special subject book, it is simply a lot easier to find a recipe to fit your need for beans than rummaging through the index of six other books.

As expected from a professional cookbook writer, all the recipes are exceptionally well written and there is a delightful variety in the selection. I cannot guarantee that this book will remove the pasty flavor of beans from your preparations (especially since we have no way of knowing how old our dried beans are), but it will make every effort to do so. The rest is up to you.

Very pleasant, very informative, and very tasty read. Recommended.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars All about beans, July 2, 2011
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Although a bit overpriced for such a compact little book this book is a valuable resource for any cook, professional or domestic. Beans and legumes in general are extremely versitile and this little book is key to helping you to unlock your imagination, and utilise thoose, lentils, beans or chickpeas that have been hiding in a jar on your shelf for ages. Legumes have enough protein that they are often used as meat substitutes. Lentils go back to early Bible times, and are both fragrant and tasty Legumes are a very healthy food, and while they don't fight breast cancer specifically, they can boost your overall health. Having noted the importance of legumes in your daily diet, the author of this book offers numerous ways to serve them up to your family, either as a side dish or as a main course stew. Pictures are absent from this book but in this case that should not be a deterrant from purchasing as the directions are easy and straightforward!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoying my beans!, March 25, 2011
By 
B. Stephenson (Sandy, OR United States) - See all my reviews
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I was very pleased with this book, which I think is saying a lot because I have a hard time finding cookbooks I like. Most seem to have too many ingredients, unusual ingredients, or expensive ingredients, and/or too many steps/complicated prep. I am an experienced cook, but I have a busy life and don't have time for 2 hours of prep work, nor do I have the money and shopping time to collect numerous ingredients that won't be used in any other dishes. However, I found the recipes in this book to be just what I wanted: mainly basic pantry staples I already use, simple prep work, with very satisfying results. I found some refreshing new flavors with just the things I already have in my kitchen, and I also found that I learned basic bean cooking skills that will allow me to modify recipes and experiment to create my own; this is even more valuable that just gaining a few new good recipes (which I also gained). I like preparing a large pot of beans on Saturday, continuing and using some of them as the recipe suggests and storing others to use in another recipe later in the week (includes storage recommendations for cooked beans as well). If you already enjoy beans and are looking for new recipes, or if you want to learn to cook beans, this is a good investment either way.
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