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The Sicilian Gentleman's Cookbook [Paperback]

Don Baratta (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 2, 2002

The Sicilian Gentleman's Cookbook is a son's tribute to his the father, "The Old Man" -- an Old World gent renowned as much for his cooking as for his delightful stories and outrageous claims. By the time you've finished reading his book you may not be convinced that Sicilians are responsible for chicken soup, rice, and pasta (as the Old Man claims) but you may well believe they invented laughter.

The writing style is relaxed and conversational. The recipes -- more than 160 -- combine Sicilian and American influences and include antipasto and salads; vegetables; soups and stews; pasta and sauces; seafood; poultry and meat; and sweets.

The dishes are all simple, authentic, and delicious:

  • A Meatloaf Like No Other (combines Italian sausage, pine nuts, olives and wine)- Shellfish Marinara 1, 2, and 3 (each a distinct version)
  • Pasta with Polpette (Sicilian meatballs that have a flattened oval shape, much like a stepped-on football. Odd they may look, but they're never tough since you need brown only two sides)
  • Pasta with Beans, Pasta with Artichokes, Pasta with Cauliflower, Pasta with Eggplant
  • An abundance of recipes for chicken and for fish -- and one for chicken with fish (plus a handful of dried figs)
  • Traditional veal dishes
  • Desserts that include holiday pastries, a ricotta pie, and a Sicilian rice pudding

Readers not familiar with Sicilian cooking are in for a treat. The food of the Mediterranean's largest island was influenced by the people who conquered it. From the Arabs and Moors come stuffed vegetables and the use of dried fruits and pine nuts. From the Greeks come olive oil and lemon. It is a simpler cuisine than that of the north, emphasizing leaner ingredients. For Sicilians, seafood is more important than meat, and lamb is more likely to be seen on the table than is pork.

The Sicilian Gentleman's Cookbook is filled with all the warmth, love, and happiness of the home that the Old Man created. The recipes are generously garnished with anecdotes and old-world philosophy.



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Baratta delivers a charming, rustic debut cookbook reflecting the influences of the Arabs, Moors and Greeks who occupied the Italian island of Sicily. Interspersed with anecdotes, Old World wisdom and explanations of Sicilian customs, the book is written in the lively syntax of Baratta's father ("I know of a musically inclined young man who would sing an aria from Turandot at the sight of a ripe melon, but this demonstration of exuberance I feel to be misplaced"), the "Sicilian gentleman" from whom Baratta inherited these recipes. Baratta relies on traditional Sicilian ingredients like luscious plum tomatoes, lean ground beef, Marsala wine and local Romano cheese. From the versatile Beef and Bread Crumb Filling and the traditional Veal Scaloppine to the Pasta with Eggplant, the flavors conjure an atmosphere of rural, sun-drenched simplicity that is echoed by the design of the book, a straightforward layout enlivened with elegant line drawings. Dishes range from antipasto to pastry, including rich soups, traditional pastas, local seafood, chicken and meats. Vegetables are also given their own section with much emphasis placed on stuffing, "an old Arab trick we became addicted to." Recipes like the Roast Peppers, the traditional Basil Sauce (Pesto) and the Baked Fillet of Sole in Wine Sauce are clear-cut and easily manageable by cooks of any skill level. (Apr.)
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

A charming, rustic debut cookbook ... Recipes ... are clear-cut and easily manageable by cooks of any skill level. (Publishers Weekly 20020425)

From simple to sumptuous. (Fancy Foods and Culinary Products 200302)

Filled with sarcastic and irascible Old World Charm ... a loving tribute and a superb cookbook. (Adrian Marks January Magazine 20020401)

Not only many good recipes, but it's fun to read thanks to the humor of Don and his late father. (Greg Burliuk Kingston Whig-Standard 20020504)

Amusing anecdotes accompany most recipes and make this book a lot of fun to read ... comprehensive ... wonderful recipes. (Shirley Reiss Kliatt 20020701)

Regales readers with the crotchety exhortations and recipes of 'The Old Man.' (Marialisa Calta Newspaper Enterprise Association 20020529)

Product Details

  • Paperback: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Firefly Books; Revised edition (March 2, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1552096327
  • ISBN-13: 978-1552096321
  • Product Dimensions: 11 x 8.5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #731,079 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
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4 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sicilian Cooking and Salty Opinions, April 8, 2002
By 
Bill Marsano (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Sicilian Gentleman's Cookbook (Paperback)
Back in print--at last--is "The Sicilian Gentleman's Cookbook," which Don Baratta originally self-published back in the 1980s. It's a very personal effort, an hommage to his late father, who was born in the little town of Mussomeli in central Sicily and who came to the U.S. in 1905. The elder Baratta was a man of strong opinions; for example, he didn't consider many mainland Italians to be Italians at all or, as he put it, "anything north of Palermo is Swiss." The younger Baratta minces no words either, and often in this book he and his father combine delightfully: "Cauliflower is a much-hated vegetable in this country [the U.S.], yet it need not be so. It is usually boiled and accompanied by small groans. A non-Italian guest once watched with interest the respect my father paid this detested food. Her curiosity broke down her ancient reservations, and she tried a piece. The result was near-disbelief in the lively flavor. The Old Man flatly pointed out (indifferent to the insult he offered the poor girl's family), 'If it had been prepared correctly, you would have always liked it!' So much for polite chatter. He remained unrepentant all his life."

There's much more of the same in these pages, and plenty of recipes--many of them unusual and delightful (Sicilian cooking is ine of the richest and most varied cuisines in the Mediterranean basin). The pages are large, the type is clear, and there's only one recipe to a page. So whether you try the cauliflower recipes--or the cardoons or the meat and seafood dishes--you're in for a treat. Still, the best part of this book is the salty talk of two Sicilian gentlemen--the one who wrote it and the one who inspired it.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the real thing!, December 6, 2000
By 
Vincent Nicotina (Albany, NY United States) - See all my reviews
I've given this book to all my relatives, including my Dad, who is a genuine Sicilian Gentleman, and a fine cook. He reads it and uses it, which is amazing (he usually doesn't do things by the book).

The book contains authentic recipes for a lot of dishes I encountered in my travels through Sicily. The author is quite a humourist, as well.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Favorite;, October 2, 2004
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Tonight, 1st Octber 2004, I served yet anoher delightful dinner, this one centered around "the Old Man's" stuffed Manicotti; yes, I also did a few jumbo shells (they're easier!). Marvelous! In general, the "Gentleman's" is a nicely written cokbook that I have used frequently over the past ten or so years. Indeed, the recipes are straightforward and certainly "unexceptionable", but the results--if one pays attention--are more than acceptable. I do, of course, add my own "micro-spins" to the instructions because I have been doing this (cooking) for a while. And, yes, the comments that Baratta on occasion inserts into the recipe insructions are absolutely wonderful.

So I respectfully submit this opinion not only as an accomplished home cook, and sometimes writer, but also as an aging (fully half!) Sicilian.

Nicholas Falco Fortis
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