From Publishers Weekly:
Husband-and-wife chef and restaurant owners Scialabba and Pellegrino present a sequel to The Italian Farmer’s Table, continuing the farm-to-table experience, but this time focusing on more than 30 farms ranging from Central to Southern Italy, Tuscany to Sicily. Broken down by region, recipes are balanced with essays, portraits, maps, and landscape shots, making this equal parts cookbook and travelogue. Sharing the “taste and flavor of Italian working farms” begins with crucial building-block basics such as semolina pasta dough, tomato sauce, and chicken broth before moving on to regional dishes such as broccoli tortelli with white sausage ragu from Tuscany, fried spaghetti nests with prosciutto and scamorza from Molisse, and grilled meatballs with bay leaves and lemon from Sicily. Desserts, appetizers, and side dishes balance out the pasta dishes and entrées. Headnotes, numbered recipe steps, and a solid resource section make this an easy-to-navigate title that’s well researched and filled with inspiration. (May)
From Kirkus Reviews:
A delicious journey through central and southern Italy through recipes.
In this sequel to The Italian Farmer's Table (2009), Scialabba and Pellegrino chronicle their travels to more than 30 farms and share the best recipes from each, using only what that farm produces. “We were deeply moved by the simplicity of cooking with ingredients grown and raised out the kitchen door," they write. “There was something that we connected with, that just seemed real and felt right about washing dirt off freshly picked vegetables, or noting the vibrant orange color of the free-range egg yolks we were using to make fresh pasta." At the beginning the authors provide basic recipes for pasta and crepes, and they include a charming history of the farm, how the family came to agritourism and, of course, the specialties of each house—usually at least one appetizer, entree and dessert. Home chefs can start with a beet carpaccio with pickled onions from Tuscany, move on to polenta with pork and sausage sauce from Umbria and finish with a poached pear and ricotta mousse tart from Basilicata. Some of the mouthwatering recipes are fairly simple, such as the farfalle with zucchini and mussels from Apulia, but others will take time, such as the chicken lasagna from the Michetti Convent in Abruzzo. Scialabba and Pellegrino also make adaptations for home chefs—e.g., replacing quail for Sardinia's indigenous partridges—and they include instructions on where to find wild boar in American and the contact information for all of the farms, among other points of reference.
A perfect guide to bringing home the traditional and unique flavors of Italy.
From the Oregonian:
Italians live to eat great food, and this husband-and-wife cooking and writing team spent five months traveling to small farms from Tuscany to Sicily, seeking out authentic recipes and the stories behind unique dishes. The result is part travelogue, as they tell stories about being put to work picking olives and enjoying evening-length dinners washed down with jugs of local wine. The 150 recipes are mostly rustic fare the sort of humble food you might have after a long afternoon working in an Umbrian vineyard with homemade pasta prominent in many of them.
A delicious journey through central and southern Italy through recipes. In this sequel to The Italian Farmer's Table (2009), Scialabba and Pellegrino chronicle their travels to more than 30 farms and share the best recipes from each, using only what that farm produces. "We were deeply moved by the simplicity of cooking with ingredients grown and raised out the kitchen door," they write. "There was something that we connected with, that just seemed real and felt right about washing dirt off freshly picked vegetables, or noting the vibrant orange color of the free-range egg yolks we were using to make fresh pasta." At the beginning the authors provide basic recipes for pasta and crepes, and they include a charming history of the farm, how the family came to agritourism and, of course, the specialties of each house--usually at least one appetizer, entree and dessert. Home chefs can start with a beet carpaccio with pickled onions from Tuscany, move on to polenta with pork and sausage sauce from Umbria and finish with a poached pear and ricotta mousse tart from Basilicata. Some of the mouthwatering recipes are fairly simple, such as the farfalle with zucchini and mussels from Apulia, but others will take time, such as the chicken lasagna from the Michetti Convent in Abruzzo. Scialabba and Pellegrino also make adaptations for home chefs--e.g., replacing quail for Sardinia's indigenous partridges--and they include instructions on where to find wild boar in American and the contact information for all of the farms, among other points of reference. A perfect guide to bringing home the traditional and unique flavors of Italy.