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Hardcover Italian Two Easy: Simple Recipes from the London River Cafe Book

ISBN: 0307338355

ISBN13: 9780307338358

Italian Two Easy: Simple Recipes from the London River Cafe

Simple Recipes from the London River Cafe Deliciously simple, delightfully sophisticated London's hot-spot River Cafe has been seducing guests with its completely irresistible renderings of authentic... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Nice cook book

I bought "Italian Easy" first, and liked it very much. "Italian Two Easy" turns out to be even better than the first book. The dishes are easy and yet delicious. Everybody can cook from this book.

LOVE, LOVE IT ..ITALIAN TWO EASY!!!

I was recommended to buy this book by a friend of mine who owns a very up scale B & B in Tuscany. He used to live in London and often frequented the restaurant "London River Cafe". He is an extremely accomplished cook and uses all the River Cafe cook books - actually he cooks up some of these recipes at his B & B. He serves a 5 course dinner in summer "al fresco" in the vineyards and has used a lot of these fabulous, quick and easy ever so Italian recipes. I love this book and recommend it and the others too! Happy cooking!!

Fantastic book but a mistake on page 68!

I love this Italian cookbook, I'm trying most of the recipes and unfortunately I found a mistake on page 68. The "Orecchiette, tomato, ricotta" recipe forgot to include the basil after telling us to wash it. The meal was therefore not a success, it ended up rather bland as ricotta does not have much taste on its own. I still use this cookbook every day and highly recommend it.

London Food Icon on the River

Having been to the restaurant twice in my adult life I can not only recommend the London River Cafe as a destination place but now I can actually produce some sensational, yet quite easy, recipes in the here and now. Sometimes our palette can only be satisfied with the real thing but the new book, "Italian Two Easy", is as close as you can get. I highly recommend the book.

More Great, Simple Recipes. Buy It!!!

`Italian Two Easy, Simple Recipes from the London River Café' by proprietor / chefs, Rose Gray and Ruth Rodgers is the sixth cookbook by these ladies, and I welcome it with almost as much anticipation as I did the next installment of `The Lord of the Rings' or at least the DVD release of same. As the title suggests, this volume is the second of a pair of volumes of `Easy Italian' recipes, the first published about two years ago, copyrighted in 2004. This volume actually improves on the earlier volume in that I found the layout of the first volume very annoying, to the point where it detracted from the value of the book, in spite of the fact that the recipes were almost uniformly excellent. Gray and Rogers reaffirm two major themes with this volume. First, they celebrate the genius of the Italian pantry with its rich collection of wines, olive oils, cheeses, salt cured fish, capers, breads, pasta, sausages, and cured meats. All of these products are centuries old, enhanced just a bit by the modern methods for canning beans and tomatoes. These commercial, yet artisinally prepared products are such great ingredients that one can assemble fabulous dishes with very little effort. And, that is what Mmes. Gray and Rodgers' recipes are all about. The second main behind their books is that their recipes follow a very typically English approach to recipe writing. As I wrote to Ms. Diane Jacob, author of `Will Write for Food', there seems to me to be three types of recipe writing. First is the Julia Child model of `Mastering the Art of French Cooking' which covers every detail of cooking technique in exquisite detail. The second is the Joel Robuchon style found in the `Simply French' collaboration with Patricia Wells, where the point of a recipe is often to demonstrate some salient aspect of an important ingredient technique. The third is the Elizabeth David style which is light on asides or voluminous comments on technique or ingredients. This is the style that has become so successful for most recent and contemporary English writers such as Jane Grigson, Nigel Slater, Nigella Lawson, Tamasin Day-Lewis, Gray and Rogers, and their protégé, Jamie Oliver. Now this is not the style of recipe writing you want to deal with when you are just starting out, unless it happens to be in Slater's and Day-Lewis recent large cookery manuals, `Appetite' and `Tamasin's Kitchen Bible' respectively. This is also not the style of cookbook you want if you wish to dig deep into the heart of Italian cuisine, as Gray and Rodgers do not (at least in this book) go into the techniques of either bread, pasta, or sausage making. For these techniques and important insights into the backbone of classical Italian cooking, I refer you to the grand dame of Italian cooking writing in English, Marcella Hazan and her `Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking' and her most recent `Marcella Says'. As I have said of Jamie Oliver's books, Gray and Rogers' books are primarily celebrations of the
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