Every Night Italian: Every Night Italian

Every Night Italian: Every Night Italian

Every Night Italian: Every Night Italian

Every Night Italian: Every Night Italian

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Overview

A master teacher in his own right, Giuliano Hazan learned the art of Italian cooking from the authority on Italian cooking—his mother, Marcella Hazan. When his first bestseller The Classic Pasta Cookbook appeared, Newsday exclaimed: “What a good cook he is, and what a clear and useful book he has made. He learned his mother's lessons well.”

In Every Night Italian, he writes for a new generation, addressing the concerns most often expressed by students in his cooking classes: how to make good, authentic Italian meals, with ingredients from the supermarket, when there's not much time to spend in the kitchen. With a pantry of basic Italian ingredients and detailed line drawings of the essential techniques for cutting a pepper, trimming an artichoke, sharpening a knife, and more, Giuliano Hazan teaches home cooks to prepare real Italian food like never before: quickly and easily. The 120 recipes in this book—from appetizers to desserts—each take less than forty-five minutes to prepare.

In his chapter on menu suggestions—Simple Family Menus, Elegant Sit-Down Menus, Buffet and Picnic Menus—which groups complementary dishes, Hazan also teaches home cooks how to organize their time in the kitchen and how to prepare several dishes simultaneously, making it even easier to produce a satisfying and balanced Italian meal for any occasion.

Americans love Italian food because of its genuine flavors and fresh ingredients. Now with the help of Giuliano Hazan, they will be delighted to learn that it has another wonderful virtue: it can be very simple and quick to prepare.

50 drawings of essential techniques

16 color photographs of finished dishes

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780684800288
Publisher: Scribner
Publication date: 01/12/2000
Pages: 256
Sales rank: 417,859
Product dimensions: 8.30(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

About The Author
Giuliano Hazan teaches students "how to cook Italian" at cooking schools throughout North America and abroad; in Italy, together with their partner Marilisa Allegrini, Hazan and his wife have a school in Verona's wine country. Hazan also imports Italian specialties under the label A&H Selections. He lives in Sarasota, Florida, with his wife, Lael, and their two daughters. His website is www.giulianohazan.com.

Marcella Hazan (1924–2013) was born in Cesenatico, a fishing village on the northern Adriatic shore of Italy. She studied for a career in the sciences and received two doctoral degrees from the University of Ferrara in Emilia-Romagna. In 1955 she married Victor Hazan, an Italian-born American, and moved with him to New York, where she began teaching Italian cooking classes in her apartment. In 1973 she published her first cookbook, The Classic Italian Cook Book, which introduced Americans to authentic Italian food. Her cooking schools in Italy draw students from around the world. Hazan was the recipient of two Lifetime Achievement Awards (from the James Beard Foundation in 2000, and the IACP in 2004) and a knighthood from her own country. She was the author of five additional classic cookbooks and a memoir.

Read an Excerpt

Introduction

Breathtakingly delicious, dish after dish — stunningly quick, with only three or four basic ingredients and easy techniques — Every Night Italian is an absolute treasure for busy cooks.

Giuliano Hazan is a second-generation chef and an outstanding teacher and writer with an intense love of fine food and wine from both his famous mother, Marcella Hazan, and his wine expert father, Victor. From this rich heritage Giuliano has intensified the best of the best.

He has surpassed even his mother's great talent for creating wonderful taste with few ingredients. His Shrimp Broiled with Rosemary (Gamberoni al Forno) contains basic ingredients — olive oil, lemon juice, salt, pepper, and rosemary — and a quick technique for deveining shrimp without peeling them. Literally in minutes you have prepared a magnificent dish from a famous Italian restaurant.

Giuliano has been executive chef in fine restaurants and is a master of classic techniques, but he is an even greater master of simplifying preparations. He has the kind of expertise that comes only from years of experience.

Marcella tells of sending Giuliano to summer camp when he was about seven years old. The supervisor explained that each camper would have a job, so they should be ready by the end of the week to select an activity that they liked and would like to help with. This might be putting up the canoes or setting up the archery targets. Giuliano did not wait until the end of the week. The second day he went to the supervisor and told him, "I have selected my job. You have to let me cook. I can't eat this food!" And cook he did, for the whole camp.

The writing itself is charming. You will immediately fall in love with Giuliano's straightforward honesty and intense love of good food. I know that Every Night Italian will be a much-treasured, grease-spattered mainstay of kitchens around the country.

Shirley O. Corriher

Foreword

Encouraged by the popularity of his first cookbook, The Classic Pasta Cookbook, my son, Giuliano, announced that he would start work on another. "Have you got a particular approach in mind yet?" I asked him. "I do," he said. "Whenever I chat with the people who have come to one of my cooking classes, and I ask them what they cook every day at home, they say they don't have time to cook every day. When they entertain or on long weekends, but never every day. Don't you find that peculiar, Mother? All over Italy, at each mealtime, families come home to freshly cooked food. Women have jobs and careers, just as they do in America, yet they, and many men, too, manage to prepare a tasty meal every day. I'd like to show Americans how it can be done."

Admittedly, Italian lives play out to a different rhythm than American ones. Most of that country shuts down for a few hours at midday so that people can leave their work to have their main meal at home. Rare is the neighborhood that doesn't have either market stalls or excellent food shops, and one doesn't have far to go for fresh, local ingredients and basic staples. It's unrealistic to try to graft Italian life onto American roots. But some of the values that bring richness and stability to Italian families can do the same for a family in this country, whether dinner is at noontime, as it is in Italy and as it was once in America's South, or in the evening, as it is throughout America today. Those values are engendered and reaffirmed at the moment when the family, be it large or small, can come to the table expecting to share and enjoy good food.

How to find the time? Giuliano shows you how you can put a delicious, heartwarming dinner on the table in less than an hour, as so many Italians do. No one, I think, is better qualified than he to interpret the genuine, life-enhancing flavor of Italian food so that a hurried and harried American cook can confidently and regularly reproduce it. One doesn't choose to transmit a culinary tradition from one culture to another simply because one wants to, but because one can. Although American-born, Giuliano was raised not just in an Italian home but in an Italian kitchen. He lived some of his most formative years in Italy, a country to which he returns each year. At the same time, with his California-born wife, he is bringing up his own young American family in a very American place, a medium-size town on the west coast of Florida. He knows what you need to know because for him it's not theory, it's practice. It's the food that he puts on his family table every day.

Now that my husband and I have transplanted ourselves from Italy to the States, and I too have become an American housewife, I intend to profit from Giuliano's experiences. There are so many dishes in this marvelous book that I shall be making for my husband: the Soup with Mushrooms and Potatoes, the Fusilli with Cauliflower and Olives, the Fish with Juniper, and the Braised Beef are among them. I have had the Orange Tart at Giuliano's house and if mine turns out half as well as his, it is likely to become our favorite dessert.

Every Night Italian is a glorious promise, and I congratulate Giuliano on his daring to make it. It is not just a way of cooking but also — through cooking — a way of living. It is a way that has brought and continues to bring happiness to millions. When you buy Giuliano's book, it will assuredly make him happy. But when you use it and act upon its premise, it should make you happy. I hope it shall.

Marcella Hazan

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments

Foreword by Marcella Hazan

Introduction by Shirley Corriher

Preface

The Italian Pantry

Some Essential Techniques

Appetizers

Soups

Pasta and Rice

Fish and Shellfish

Meats

Vegetables

Salads

Desserts

Menus

Simple Family Menus

Elegant Sit-Down Menus

Buffet and Picnic Menus

Index

Index of Recipes That Can Be Made Ahead

Foreword

Foreword

Encouraged by the popularity of his first cookbook, The Classic Pasta Cookbook, my son, Giuliano, announced that he would start work on another. "Have you got a particular approach in mind yet?" I asked him. "I do," he said. "Whenever I chat with the people who have come to one of my cooking classes, and I ask them what they cook every day at home, they say they don't have time to cook every day. When they entertain or on long weekends, but never every day. Don't you find that peculiar, Mother? All over Italy, at each mealtime, families come home to freshly cooked food. Women have jobs and careers, just as they do in America, yet they, and many men, too, manage to prepare a tasty meal every day. I'd like to show Americans how it can be done."

Admittedly, Italian lives play out to a different rhythm than American ones. Most of that country shuts down for a few hours at midday so that people can leave their work to have their main meal at home. Rare is the neighborhood that doesn't have either market stalls or excellent food shops, and one doesn't have far to go for fresh, local ingredients and basic staples. It's unrealistic to try to graft Italian life onto American roots. But some of the values that bring richness and stability to Italian families can do the same for a family in this country, whether dinner is at noontime, as it is in Italy and as it was once in America's South, or in the evening, as it is throughout America today. Those values are engendered and reaffirmed at the moment when the family, be it large or small, can come to the table expecting to share and enjoy good food.

How to find the time? Giuliano shows youhow you can put a delicious, heartwarming dinner on the table in less than an hour, as so many Italians do. No one, I think, is better qualified than he to interpret the genuine, life-enhancing flavor of Italian food so that a hurried and harried American cook can confidently and regularly reproduce it. One doesn't choose to transmit a culinary tradition from one culture to another simply because one wants to, but because one can. Although American-born, Giuliano was raised not just in an Italian home but in an Italian kitchen. He lived some of his most formative years in Italy, a country to which he returns each year. At the same time, with his California-born wife, he is bringing up his own young American family in a very American place, a medium-size town on the west coast of Florida. He knows what you need to know because for him it's not theory, it's practice. It's the food that he puts on his family table every day.

Now that my husband and I have transplanted ourselves from Italy to the States, and I too have become an American housewife, I intend to profit from Giuliano's experiences. There are so many dishes in this marvelous book that I shall be making for my husband: the Soup with Mushrooms and Potatoes, the Fusilli with Cauliflower and Olives, the Fish with Juniper, and the Braised Beef are among them. I have had the Orange Tart at Giuliano's house and if mine turns out half as well as his, it is likely to become our favorite dessert.

Every Night Italian is a glorious promise, and I congratulate Giuliano on his daring to make it. It is not just a way of cooking but also -- through cooking -- a way of living. It is a way that has brought and continues to bring happiness to millions. When you buy Giuliano's book, it will assuredly make him happy. But when you use it and act upon its premise, it should make you happy. I hope it shall.

Marcella Hazan

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