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Fiamma: The Essence of Contemporary Italian Cooking
 
 
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Fiamma: The Essence of Contemporary Italian Cooking [Hardcover]

Michael White (Author), Joseph De Leo (Photographer), Joanna Pruess (Contributor)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 16, 2006
The high-profile chef of New York's acclaimed Fiamma restaurant brings his contemporary spin on classic Italian cuisine to home cooks with 110 delectable recipes and more than 75 stunning color photos. Capping off the book are dessert recipes from Fiamma's pastry chef, Elizabeth Katz, which include updated twists on Italian classics such as Blackberry Gelato and Cup of Tiramisu.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

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From Publishers Weekly

Fiamma means flame in Italian, White tells us in his foreword—and his is the fire of the convert; of Norwegian descent, he grew up in Wisconsin and didn't taste real Italian cooking until he was 19. After cooking at Spiaggo in Chicago, he studied and cooked in Italy, married an Italian and ended up opening Fiamma and then Vento in Manhattan. Unlike some books drawing on New York restaurant menus, his recipes are perfect for the reasonably well-equipped and competent home cook, even absent a phalanx of prep and washing-up help. Pasta recipes include Gnocchi with Morels and Fava Beans. For main courses, seafood stands out: there's Tuna with a caponata of eggplant, as well as Grilled Swordfish with Artichoke Caponata. Often he and pastry chef Katz offer store-bought alternatives to scratch components, such as commercial vanilla, hazelnut or other gelato to replace the Wildflower Honey Gelato that accompanies Crustless Apple Tart, but the gelato recipes are so simple and so appealing that readers without ice cream makers are likely to buy one immediately. Appealing closeup photos are notably natural, suggesting real food from a kitchen, not a stylist's studio. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (October 16, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0764599313
  • ISBN-13: 978-0764599316
  • Product Dimensions: 10.2 x 8.6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.9 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #965,875 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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7 Reviews
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3.9 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fiamma is Excellent !!! Simple Italian Cooking at its Best!!, January 4, 2007
This review is from: Fiamma: The Essence of Contemporary Italian Cooking (Hardcover)
I spent three and a half weeks in Italy on my honeymoon and then spent three and a half weeks on my return to San Francisco trying to find food that tasted like what we ate all over Italy, without success. I was looking for a good Italian cook book recently and spent several hours at the local bookstore reading and studying the many offerings. After five minutes reading Fiamma, I was struck by the how different this book felt. I almost felt I was back in Cinque Terra watching seafood risotto being prepared as I read parts of Mr. White's book. There is great value and beauty to the simple, well-considerd thoughts and recipes presented in Fiamma. Our many great meals in Italy were made with fresh,simple ingredients.Fiamma captures the essence of this style in its recipes. I felt like I had met a kindred spirit to my visit to Italy in reading about the lessons Mr. Smith learned cooking there. I haven't cooked all the recipes yet, but can say without hesitation, that following Smith's mantra of buying the freshest and best quality ingredients you can afford makes the recipes I've prepared shine. There are many easy and straightford recipes presented..great value for money to those who Love Italian food!I look forward to eating at the restaurant in New York as well.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars New Italian Restaurant Dishes You Can Make. Great Desserts, December 5, 2006
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This review is from: Fiamma: The Essence of Contemporary Italian Cooking (Hardcover)
`Fiamma' by American restauranteur of Italian cuisine, Michael White, assisted by Joanna Pruess, with desserts by Elizabeth Katz is another in the recent trend of books which market themselves as manuals on `contemporary Italian cooking' when they are actually nothing more than good restaurant cookbooks. Another recent entry into this category is Scott Conant's `New Italian Cooking', which impressed me when I reviewed it, in spite of the pretentious title and aspirations.

Conant and White seem to have much in common, especially as they distinguish themselves from `Mister Italian chef in New York', the redoubtable Mario Batali. While Mario's genetic credentials run to true `Italian-American' traditions, Conant and White both seem to pride themselves on having virtually no Italian blood. We have ample evidence that this is no barrier to cooking great Italian food and even creating great Italian styled dishes. The Brits, Rogers and Gray and wunderkind, Jamie Oliver have been serving up first rate Italian dishes for years now, and both London's River Café and Oliver's `15' seem to be thriving on this diet.

Conant and White are also predominantly rooted in the Northern Italian cuisine, but both distinguish themselves from Mario by focusing on distinctly Italian ingredients. This really sort of runs contrary to their claim to modernity, as Mario seems to have the right idea when he applies the Italian food ethic to local American ingredients. But, all three manage to create totally marvelous dishes.

A glance at White's Table of Contents reveals a style about as Italian as you can get and still be publishing an American book. All primary chapter and recipe titles are in Italian, with all having an English translation just below. A quick glance at recipe titles shows White being almost 100% true to the classic Italian larder and market. In one recipe, White says `I like to marry old dishes with contemporary ingredients.' Well, his ingredients in this dish (not including herbs and spices) are truffle oil, balsamic vinegar, baby artichokes, sea scallops, and frisee. Now which of these ingredients is `contemporary'? I will grant that combining `carciofi alla giudia' with scallops and frisee may be new, but these are certainly not new ingredients. The author makes something of the fact that the pumpkin is a `new world' vegetable that only arrived in Italy in the 16th century. I guess that in a country where a 900-year-old church may be considered `young', this is new, but then the great orange gourd got there at the same time as the tomato, and no one is calling the tomato a `new' Italian ingredient. `The Silver Spoon', the Italian `Joy of Cooking' has 16 recipes for pumpkin listed in its index. There are also several dishes done `in the style of ...' one Italian region or another. Where is the `Contemporary' in this book?

I confess I'm having just a bit of fun at Chef White's expense. I really like almost all the recipes in this book, and I have no doubt that most of the recipes in the book are White's own creation, as much as Conant's recipes and Rogers and Gray's recipes are their own takes on Italian ingredients and techniques. I am also pleased that publisher Wiley didn't put a premium price tag on the book, as they did with the somewhat pretentious `Working the Plate' from Christopher Styler.

Comparing books from both Conant and White to Batali's flagship restaurant book `The Babbo Cookbook', I find both Conant and White's recipes to tend to the simpler, with much more uncommon with Rogers and Gray than with `Molto Mario'.

I also think White brings just a bit of unusual insight to Italian cooking. His sidebars have offered some notions I have not seen before, but they are not earth shaking. If you want major insights into Italian culinary technique, see Marcella Hazan's `Marcella Says...'.

As I swing between assigning four or five stars, I look at the dessert chapter done by Ms. Katz, and decide that this contribution tips the balance to five stars. The recipes are true to Italian Dolci simplicity, but have an extra Franco-American panache that makes them more interesting than poached pears and Parmesan. I also give extra credit for the quality of the photographs, except for the fact that many times they seem to end up one page too far on.

This will do what all good restaurant cookbooks should do; provide good, new, not too expensive recipes with a story. In this case, the story is that an American mid-westerner goes to Italy and does good in the Italian kitchen.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great recipes!, September 9, 2011
This review is from: Fiamma: The Essence of Contemporary Italian Cooking (Hardcover)
this is a great book! i cook a lot of french and ialian foods. everyting from Laurousse to Giada and back again. i just cooked my first two recipes from this book (the cod/shellfish dish on page 120, and the short ribs braise on page 172) and as a result i had the two best meals i have made in quite some time.
the fish dish was done by the time the pasta was finished cooking. very, very quick, delicious food.
of course short ribs take a long time to cook, but it's not like you are doing anything for it while it is cooking. the prep for that one was quick. quicker than most american style stews.
this book is not american- italian. it is italian.
i don't know just what is so magical about his recipes- none read like anything lots of other books would not have...they just turn out better.
buy it.
use it.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
instructions for gelato, berry marmalade, gigante beans, robiola cheese, final drizzle, scamorza cheese, cup grape tomatoes, large rib celery, vanilla gelato, basic pasta, rich chicken stock, broccoli rabe, truffle butter, large metal bowl, mascarpone cream
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Pinot Grigio, Homemade Chicken Stock, Rosemary Salt, Pecorino Romano, Salmoriglio Sauce, Lemon Olive Oil, Vin Santo, Rosemary Roasted Potatoes, Sauvignon Blanc, Vanilla Bean Gelato, Chestnut Honey Glazed Peaches
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