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Hardcover Italy in Small Bites Book

ISBN: 0688111971

ISBN13: 9780688111977

Italy in Small Bites

Award-winning author Carol Field offers the first cookbook to focus on the Italian tradition of merende, a between-meals meal that features such favorites as pizza and focaccia.Breakfast, lunch, and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

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Dependable Carol Field

Italy in small bites follows the pattern of other books by Carol Field. The recipes are well researched, authentic and well tested. If you follow the directions, the end result will come out as she describes. It is heartwarming for me to see many of the items in the cookbook I am familiar with and that bring back fond memories. Not to mention being able to reproduce such recipes! Among others, I have tried the Bucellato recipe (a sweet bread from Lucca with a lot of history behind it) and it has now become one of my favorite breakfast food (and also as an occasional snack or after dinner sweet bite). Brava Carol!

Italy's Answer to Mezes and Tapas. Highly Recommended

Carol Field is a major star in the field of Italian culinary writers to whom respect is shown by most major Italian food writers and many major bread baking authors for her important book `The Italian Baker'. In turn, Field shows respect for many of her colleagues such as Patience Gray and Paula Wolfert in this book.I was always puzzled when I read in books on Greek and Spanish food that the western Mediterranean tapas and the eastern Mediterranean Mezes of both Greece and Turkey were not the same as the Italian `little dishes' labeled antipasto. The basis for this difference was that tapas and Mezes are made to be eaten as `bar food' in the afternoon, several hours before sitting down to the final meal of the day. Antipasto, by its very name, on the other hand, is the first course of a large meal. The source of the puzzle is that I found it very hard to believe that there was an old Mediterranean tradition with well-identified dishes at both sides of the Mediterranean, but none in the center in Italy, the very heart of Mediterranean cuisine.This book answers this question. Italy has not one, but two names for between meal snacks. The older, more traditional name for a snack in the afternoon, about the same time their English cousins are having tea, is called `merenda'. Like tapas and Mezes, these are specifically made and served by Enoteca (wine bars) as well as being a traditional afternoon snack for agricultural workers in the fields. For this reason, one of the defining characteristics of merenda dishes is that they can be eaten while holding them in one hand. The derivation of the term `merenda' can be traced back to classical Latin. The second term, `spuntino' is a nineteenth century invention meaning a mid-morning snack, not unlike doughnuts at the morning coffee break. The author does not explore the origins of this word too deeply, but I would not at all be surprised to see it connected with the advent of the Industrial Revolution.As one looks at the recipes in this book, it becomes clear that the distinction between `merenda' dishes and all other Italian dishes is entirely based on when and where they are eaten. Almost every class of recipe in the book can be found in dozens of other Italian cookbooks. I have whole bookshelves weighed down with recipes for frittatas; egg tarts; polenta; grilled or marinated vegetables; condimento; bocconcini (small mozzarella balls); and Biscotti. But these are not even the stars of the merenda catalogue. Appropriate to Ms. Field's bread baking speciality, the real star of merenda is the enormous range of Italian breads and the things the Italians do with bread. This includes artisinal breads, focaccia, pizza, breads with olives and other vegetables baked within, and all the things Italians do with bread such as bruschetta, crostini, and Panini. Note that I tacked Panini on to the end of that list, as Ms. Field does not even mention sandwiches, let alone devote a chapter to it. This is odd, because in h
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