Lorenza's Pasta

Lorenza's Pasta

Author: Lorenza De' Medici Stucchi

Publisher: Clarkson Potter Publishers

Published: 1996

Total Pages: 192

ISBN-13: 9780517704400

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The host of the popular PBS-TV series The De'Medici Kitchen presents more than two hundred distinctive recipes for pasta dishes and sauces, along with a guide to making fresh pasta, and more. 20,000 first printing.


Lorenza's Pasta

Lorenza's Pasta

Author: Lorenza De'Medici

Publisher: Pavilion Books, Limited

Published: 1999-11-22

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781862050396

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In this definitive cookbook, Lorenza shares her wealth of knowledge and experience on the art of making and cooking pasta. Within 200 recipes, she sets out the prin ciples of selecting sauces with pasta shapes, and dressing a nd stuffing pasta, etc. '


Lorenza's Italian Seasons

Lorenza's Italian Seasons

Author: Lorenza De'Medici

Publisher: Pavilion

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781862055650

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

With the expertise that is the hallmark of her famous Tuscan cooking school, The Villa Table at Badia a Coltibuono, Lorenza de’ Medici teaches us to savor the best of seasonal ingredients. Sweet, tender fava beans from the spring garden are used in a simple salad with pecorino, olive oil, and parsley; apricots from summer orchards are transformed into a delicately fragrant mousse; musky wild mushrooms from the autumn woods become the basis of an elegant dish of roast pheasant; and the dark-leaved cavolo nero from the frosty winter soil is an essential ingredient for ribollita, the thick bean and vegetable soup of Tuscany. Holiday menus for every season accompany each chapter, while a pantry section provides recipes and tips for preserving and storing produce for future occasions. Illustrated with artful color photos, this is an essential companion for all lovers of Italian cooking. Lorenza de’ Medici is the author of more than 20 bestselling books, including The Villa Table, The Renaissance of Italian Cooking, Lorenza’s Pasta, Lorenza’s Antipasti, and A Passion for Fruit.


Homemade Pasta Made Simple

Homemade Pasta Made Simple

Author: Manuela Zangara

Publisher: Sourcebooks, Inc.

Published: 2017-08-08

Total Pages: 375

ISBN-13: 1623159199

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Make pasta from scratch that's absolutely magnifico! Discover the joy of creating your own pasta with the essential homemade pasta cookbook! This step-by-step pasta book shows you how easy it is to make delicious pasta (and even sauce!)—all completely from scratch. Teaching everything from mixing dough to drying pasta, this pasta making book for beginners and experts alike. Want to make farfalle with Bolognese? Ravioli with sun-dried tomato sauce? Gnocchi with pumpkin and sausage sauce? Open this pasta cookbook for dozens of simple pasta and sauce recipes that you can mix and match to make your perfect pasta night. A complete beginner's guide—Go from noodle novice to pasta pro with this simple pasta cookbook's 3 foolproof dough recipes, essential preparation techniques, and a tool selection guide. 65 tasty pastas—Farfalle, tagliatelle, ravioli, gnocchi...this pasta cookbook teaches you to make, shape, stuff, and cook all kinds of pasta. Easy sauces—Savor 30 homemade sauce recipes—topped off with ideal pasta serving suggestions. Never settle for premade pasta again!


Pasta Recipes The art of the best Italian food, with wonderful recipes

Pasta Recipes The art of the best Italian food, with wonderful recipes

Author:

Publisher: jideon francisco marques

Published: 2024-02-18

Total Pages: 597

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Pasta making is, at its most basic, an act of humility. It’s repetitive, precise manual labor—a simple gift to the gods of gluten offered up in flour-dusted basements and prep kitchens around the world. It is ceremonious only in its utter lack of ceremony. What has always appealed to me is how the frank marriage of two ingredients—whether flour and water or flour and eggs—splinters into hundreds of variations of stuffed, rolled, extruded, dried, stamped, and hand-cut shapes; how each has its own origin story, rhythmic set of motions, and tools; and how mastery can sometimes come down to an elusive sleight of hand: the flick of a wrist, the perfect twist of the index finger away from the thumb. Movements learned only through practice. In the two years between leaving A Voce in Manhattan and opening my first restaurant, Lilia, in Brooklyn, I spent most of my days at home learning, for the first time since I was a kid, what it meant to cook not for accolades or recognition but for comfort. There was no Michelin. No New York Times. No owners. No need to prove that a Jewish kid from Connecticut with no Italian heritage had any business cooking Italian food. No longer were my thoughts, Is this nice enough? or Is this cool enough? but rather, What kind of food do I want to eat? or What food do I want to cook? and most importantly, Why? I was cooking pasta that paid homage to Italy’s iconic regional dishes, sure, but the virtue of craveability was paramount. It’s why my food at Lilia and my second restaurant, Misi, is so rooted in home cooking, and it’s perhaps the only way to explain how a dish as simple as rigatoni with red sauce ended up on Lilia’s opening menu, and then once again at Misi. I wanted to serve the food that I like to eat—the food I’d always been cooking, just stripped down to the studs and rebuilt with a simple mantra in mind: quanto basta. In Italian cookbooks, quanto basta is typically represented as “q.b.” It translates to “as much as is necessary,” and it appears when an ingredient is listed without an exact quantity. It’s essentially the Italian version of “salt to taste,” but it has come to symbolize a shift in focus for me—one that places simplicity and comfort first and always makes me ask, Is this really necessary? It took me decades to get here. This book is meant as a ride-along, from red sauce to regional classics to the pastas I’ve made my own. At its core is a journey back to the home regions of some of my favorite pastas in an effort to understand them with new clarity—to gain a deeper knowledge of not only how they are faring in a country undergoing constant culinary evolution but also of their sense of place. Perhaps more than anything, though, this book is my love letter to pasta. What has made pasta the cornerstone of Italian culinary culture for centuries, an indelible part of so many Americans’ early food memories, and a food so eminently alluring that even the gluten averse cannot resist its siren song is that it asks, first and foremost, something elemental of us: that we enjoy it.


Travelers' Tales Tuscany

Travelers' Tales Tuscany

Author: James O'Reilly

Publisher: Travelers' Tales

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 256

ISBN-13: 9781885211682

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Essays by well-known travel writers--including Frances Mayes, Jan Morris, Barbara Grizzuti Harrison, and Ferenc MbtT--guide readers through the beautiful, sun-baked hills of Tuscany in search of friendly locals, breathtaking scenery, scrumptious dining, and award-winning wine. Original.


The Complete Book of Pasta and Noodles

The Complete Book of Pasta and Noodles

Author: Cook's Illustrated Magazine

Publisher: Clarkson Potter

Published: 2002-09-01

Total Pages: 499

ISBN-13: 060980930X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Featuring more than five hundred recipes, this celebration of pasta and noodles includes instructions for preparing a wide range of fresh pastas and hundreds of tasty sauces, casseroles, and side dishes. Reprint. 10,000 first printing.


Pasta

Pasta

Author: Lorenza De' Medici Stucchi

Publisher:

Published: 1997

Total Pages: 108

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK