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29 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very nice recipe reference. Weak on 'essentials'., March 3, 2008
This review is from: Williams-Sonoma Essentials of Italian (Hardcover)
`Essentials of Italian' is Michele Scicolone's second coffee table sized book on Italian cuisine for Williams-Sonoma, the first being the larger, splashier, `Savoring Italy' volume, where her name is much more prominently displayed as author. In this book, she gets third billing behind Chuck Williams, the general editor and Bill Bettencourt, the photographer. Scicolone only gets credit for providing the recipes, with all the supporting text being provided by Steve Siegelman. This is unfortunate. Of the two, this volume is a superior guide to Italian cuisine, less expensive, and a better photographic presentation of the recipe dishes.
This puts me in a quandary, as I recall giving `Savoring Italy' five stars, based on the fact that it was a worthy and non-redundant complement to Scicolone's `1000 Italian Recipes'. But one option is easy. If you are choosing between the two, and it is the recipes which are important to you, pick `Essentials of Italian' and not `Savoring Italy'.
The best part of the book is the fact that it does a decent job of realizing its title of `Essentials'. Before opening the book, I assumed that a book with that title should give good instructions on how to make fresh pasta, how to make gnocchi, how to make bulk sausage, how to make a pizza, how to make a ragu Bolognese, how to make an artisanal bread, how to make mozzarella, how to make a ricotta cheesecake, and how to make a timbale. I was just a bit disappointed when I found only four out of these eight; however I understand why sausage, sourdough breads, and mozzarella were left out. I don't understand why she missed the Neapolitan ricotta lemon cheesecake. So, the book comes through with at least all the common dishes typically made by the amateur home cook. And, with these and all the other recipes in the book, it is very true to its objective of providing `authentic' recipes. For every common named recipe, there are often dozens of variations, many of which are only remotely similar to their roots. But here, the Roman veal saltimbocca recipe is really the way they make it in Rome, with nothing except the veal, the prosciutto, the sage, and the butter. No intruding spinach or braciole presentation to muddy the basic charm of the simple recipe.
The same thing is true of virtually every other recipe in the book. I have seen dozens of ragu Bolognese recipes and even those which have no pretensions to being a `quick' version often skimp on the most basic aspect of the classic recipe, which is combining several (usually three) different kinds of meat into the sauce. While the recipes for the same dishes in both `Savoring Italy' and `Essentials of Italian' are identical (word for word, really), bagna cauda, for example, `Savoring Italy' simply does not cover most of the most basic recipes. Rather, it delivers less familiar or at least different variations. `Savoring...' for example, gives us the more elaborate gratineed ricotta and spinach Gnocchi, while `Essentials...' gives us the more basic `Gnocchi Verde'. Both are classic Tuscan dishes, but `Essentials...' gives us the simpler recipe.
Both books give a sound bite approach to a culinary tour of Italy, superficial compared to the great texts by Elizabeth David, Waverly Root, and even Claudia Roden's aging `The Food of Italy', but with great pictures and very nicely presented sketches of culinary differences between the 20 Italian administrative regions. `Essentials...' is better at this, but it is still a good INTRODUCTION. It leaves many details untouched or poorly handled. The `culinary signature' and `regional specialties' are excellent, but here is where I found my first disappointment. This geographical summary gives us lists of important local dishes; however, so many of the recipes for these dishes are not available in the main chapters. The single page of `Principles of Italian Cooking' is nice, but very superficial. In contrast, Marcella Hazan's `Marcella Says' devotes almost 80 pages to basic techniques. The single pages devoted to wines, cheeses, dried pastas, cheeses, and pantry items are similarly nice, but thin. The page on pasta shapes offers a metaphor for some of the weaknesses of the book overall. On the left is a list of named pasta shapes and descriptions. On the right is an excellent photograph of seven pasta shapes, but there is no connection between the two. How difficult would it have been to give a picture of each of the 30 dried pasta shapes. A similar disjoint is found in the excellent four page display of pasta handling techniques on pages 92 - 95. Unfortunately, the recipe for fresh pasta is on page 274, with no reference made between the two pages. If the treatment of fresh pasta making were better organized, and if the same treatment were given to making gnocchi and flatbreads, this would have been a near-great book for beginners. Instead, it is only a pretty good armchair book and a better than average reference for classic Italian recipes. I was also disappointed that there were no sources for hard to get products such as pig's cheek and Sardinian dried fish eggs.
The primary consideration for buying this book is how many other books on Italian cuisine you already own or anticipate buying, and why you buy books like this. If you genuinely buy these books for living room decorations and browsing during lulls in social visits, `Savoring Italy' is just a bit better. If you are looking for that one book on Italian cuisine, `Essentials of Italian' is quite good for the casual interest. If your library is already filled with books by Scicolone, Hazan, David, Root, Batali, Bastianich, Joyce Goldstein, Nancy Harmon Jenkins, and Lynne Rossetto Kaspar, you have no need for this book.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A must have!, October 5, 2008
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This review is from: Williams-Sonoma Essentials of Italian (Hardcover)
This is a wonderful cookbook and more! A must have for anyone who loves Italian cuisine I've made many recipes from this book and they're great! Great photography as well :) A pleasure to read!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic representation of Italy!, January 15, 2010
This review is from: Williams-Sonoma Essentials of Italian (Hardcover)
My husband and I honeymooned in Italy, traveling to Rome, Florence and Venice. We had many many great meals there and I came home wanting a cookbook with the recipes for those meals. This book had ALL of them. I love the photos and how it is organized. The two recipes I have tried out of it (carbonara and osso bucco) were right on with what we had in Italy. This book is authentic and I disagree with the review that said it was not "essential". Essential to me means all the "standard" recipes you think of when you think of Italian cuisine. Now, this book isn't essential "American Italian" with garlic bread and extra cheese all over everything, but it had every essential "true italian" recipe I was looking for and I can't wait to make them all.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars recipes are amazing, if a bit time-consuming, February 25, 2011
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This review is from: Williams-Sonoma Essentials of Italian (Hardcover)
recipes are moderately involved, probably takes me 1.5 hours on average to do them, but they're delicious and it's a great starter on italian cooking techniques. pork ragu recipe is amazing.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great recipes, February 18, 2010
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DBBM (Pennsylvania) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Williams-Sonoma Essentials of Italian (Hardcover)
I am iItalian and love to cook . I recommend this book highly. I've looked over the recipes and they are very close to what I would find in an authentic Italian cookbook. Great buy. Thanks William Sonoma.
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Williams-Sonoma Essentials of Italian
Williams-Sonoma Essentials of Italian by Michele Scicolone (Hardcover - February 22, 2008)
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