Cooking alla giudia A celebration of the Jewish food of Italy

Benedetta Jasmine Guetta

Book - 2022

"From deep-fried artichokes (carciofi alla giudia) to hearty fish stew (zuppa di pesce), the Venetian specialty of sarde in saor (sweet-and-sour sardines), and orecchiette pasta, some of Italy's best-known dishes are Jewish in origin. But little is known about the Jewish people in Italy and their food traditions. From Milan to Rome and Florence to Sicily, the culture of Jews is entrenched in Italy. It was the Jews, for example, who taught Italians to eat eggplants, and thus helped inspire the classic eggplant parmigiana. Cooking alla Giudia is the ultimate tribute to the wonderfully rich, but still largely unknown, culinary heritage of the Jews of Italy. With recipes from Persian, Lebanese, Ashkenazic, and Libyan Jews, and kosher,... vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free options, author Benedetta Jasmin Guetta is on a mission to tell the story of how the Jews changed Italian food, to preserve the extraordinary recipes of the Jewish communities of Italy and make them vital and relevant today. Highlighted throughout the book are holiday meals with regional Italian specialties along with guides to the Italian cities with Jewish heritage. The book will show how to integrate the recipes into your everyday meals and holiday traditions, including indexes indicating which dishes are best for which holidays and which recipes are kosher"--

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Recipes
Published
New York : Artisan Books [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Benedetta Jasmine Guetta (author)
Physical Description
351 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781579659806
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Guetta, creator of Labna, a kosher cooking blog specializing in Italian recipes, makes her U.S. debut with this fascinating deep dive into Jewish Italian food, a cuisine that reaches as far back as 66 CE when Jews arrived in Italy as slaves during the Jewish-Roman wars. Among their culinary contributions is the use of eggplant, exemplified here in appetizers including fried eggplant with melon, as well as a stew of eggplant and other vegetables. Jewish settlers of the 12th century imported orecchiette from France; the from-scratch version here is paired with a sauce of broccoli rabe, anchovies, garlic, and olive oil. Choices like chickpea soup with tendons and gristle embrace the centuries-long history of the Jewish ghetto, while more celebratory recipes geared toward holidays include Passover lamb with artichokes and fava beans, the Tuscan Hanukkah meal of fried chicken, and a variety of cookies and biscotti suitable as Purim treats. Following strictly kosher guidelines means an absence of pork and shrimp, nor can cheese or cream be included in any meat dish. As a result, there is goose prosciutto and salami, spaghetti carbonara with either dried beef or turkey bacon, and dairy-free lasagna with a béchamel sauce of olive oil and vegetable broth. Two cultures, each steeped in culinary tradition, complement each other in this insightful guide. (Apr.)

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