Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Fans will appreciate this companion book to Bastianich's latest PBS series of the same name (after Lidia's Italian-American Kitchen), and it may win her some new admirers as well. It presents the food Bastianich prepares at home for her large family (which includes children, grandchildren, siblings and her 80-plus-year-old mother and her companion, who live upstairs), but it's also proof that home cooking need not be oversimplified, with plenty of projects for those who relish a challenge. There are also many photographic illustrations offering gentle guidance to readers attempting Grilled Tuna Rollatini under Tomato-Lemon Marinade, or Pasticciata Bolognese. Elegant recipes, such as Fresh Pear and Pecorino Ravioli, are sprinkled throughout, but the majority are for hearty dishes that lend themselves to serving family-style, like Zucchini and Country Bread Lasagna with day-old bread in place of pasta and Braised Beef Shoulder Roast with Venetian Spice, which incorporates cinnamon and coffee beans. As testament to both Bastianich's creativity and the endless supply of good food from Italy, there are authentic, unusual treasures here, like Riso Sart?, which packs risotto into molds for individual towers. Bastianich is also generous with clever tips and brainstorms: Why not use poached garlic pur?e for those with delicate digestion, or poach corn on the cob in tomato sauce? The range is impressive, the flavors strong. It's enough to make readers clamor to be adopted into the Bastianich clan. 85 color photos. Agent, Jane Dystel. (Dec. 1) Forecast: A 10-city tour, not to mention the visibility offered by the author's newest PBS series, to begin airing in March 2005, should win plenty of support for the 150,000-copy first printing. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
The companion volume to her new PBS series, this latest book from Bastianich is a delight. Some of her earlier cookbooks (e.g., La Cucina di Lidia) focused on the more complicated dishes served at her restaurants, but this one offers the simple but delectable Italian recipes she loves to make for friends and family-often with her grandchildren or other members of her extended family helping out in the kitchen. There are dozens of pastas and many easy-to-prepare "skillet dishes," such as Skillet Gratinate of Summer Tomato and Pork. And although the recipes are quick and uncomplicated, many of them are unusual, from Roasted Black Olives and Pearl Onions to Poached Whole Zucchini with Lemon and Olive Oil. Bastianich has a warm, reassuring tone, and she includes innumerable helpful tips, serving suggestions (many of her recipes are very versatile, suitable for a range of uses or presentations), and other invaluable information. Step-by-step photographs illustrate kitchen techniques, and charming photos of the author's grandchildren and other family scenes add to the appeal of this engaging, immensely practical book. An essential purchase. [With a first printing of 150,000 copies, the publisher is expecting big things.-Ed.] (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.