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Naples at Table [Hardcover]

Arthur Schwartz
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins; 1 edition (10 Dec 1998)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 006018261X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060182618
  • Product Dimensions: 24 x 20.3 x 4.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 712,905 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Arthur Schwartz
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Product Description

Review

..".simple, straightforward and traditional recipes...informative and often amusing commentary also make this a pleasant page turner."-- "The Washington Post""Arthur Schwartz's "Naples at Table" has captured the wonders of Naples cooking and all that goes with it. The book is both learned and sensual...Just reading the recipes makes me hungry...This Christmas I gave "Naples at Table" to friends who like cookbooks, and now I'm thinking of going to Naples in the summer. That's how much I loved it."-- Irene Sax, epicurious.com"I made 'Bucatini alla Caruso, ' named for the tenor Enrico Caruso, who loved to prepare it for his friends in Brooklyn, singing his way from restaurant to restaurant...Although I did not sing as I served, my friends did sing my praises...claiming it was one of the best pasta dishes they've ever had. The leftovers were even good the next day, reheated with supplements of garlic, tomato and ricotta."-- Erica Schachter, "Wall Street Journal""As Arthur Schwartz makes happily clear, the food of this southern seaport city encompasses not only pizza but also Peppered Mussels, Prosciutto Brioche and Smothered Escarole. The information is encyclopedic."-- Ann Hodgman, "Food & Wine""Arthur Schwartz's king-size introduction to Neapolitan cooking...has that labor-of-love air you find in books by Americans who feel an almost religious mission to share the pleasure they take in some other place. By exploring everything -- but everything -- about the general region of Campania as if it were irresistibly fascinating, Schwartz makes it so...This is as close as you can get to total immersion in Naples by reading and cooking."-- Anne Mendelson, "Gourmet.".".a labor of love for WOR's'Food Talk' host, Arthur Schwartz...blunt, impudent, passionate voice of the people that he is...I plan to use it as my travel guide to Naples."-- Gael Greene, "New York Magazine""How did America get so far into the Italian food craze without a single work in a region so crucial in shaping the Italian American culinary identity? Never mind. Now we have one that's illuminating, inviting, funny, thoughtful and unabashedly personal."-- "Los Angeles Times""Arthur Schwartz has long been enamored of the foods of southern Italy. Here he shows that the same cuisine which in its Americanization has perhaps become too rich and heavy can be as subtle as the trendier cuisine from Emilia-Romagna and Tuscany."-- Dale Salm, "Connecticut Magazine""Arthur Schwartz was born to write this fabulous book full of dishes on every page you will instantly want to try. The notes are both wholly informative and dead-on accurate, the recipes clear, the illustrations excellent, and...for 250 recipes spread over 430 pages, this is the bargain of the decade."-- John Mariani, "Mariani's Virtual Gourmet Newsletter"

Product Description

Arthur Schwartz, popular radio host, cookbook author, and veteran restaurant critic, invites you to join him as he celebrates the food and people of Naples and Campania. Encompassing the provinces of Avellino, Benevento, Caserta, and Salerno, the internationally famous resorts of the Amalfi Coast, Capri, and Ischia--and, of course, Naples itself, Italy's third largest and most exuberant city--Campania is the cradle of Italian-American cuisine.

In "Naples at Table," Arthur Schwartz takes a fresh look at the region's major culinary contributions to the world--its pizza, dried pasta, seafood, and vegetable dishes, its sustaining soups and voluptuous desserts--and offers the recipes for some of Campania's lesser-known specialties as well. Always, he provides all the techniques and details you need to make them with authenticity and ease.

"Naples at Table" is the first cookbook in English to survey and document the cooking of this culturally important and gastronomically rich area. Schwartz spent years traveling to Naples and throughout the region, making friends, eating at their tables, working with home cooks and restaurant chefs, researching the origins of each recipe. Here, then, are recipes that reveal the truly subtle, elegant Neapolitan hand with such familiar dishes as baked ziti, eggplant parmigiana, linguine with clam sauce, and tomato sauces of all kinds.

This is the Italian food the world knows best, at its best--bold and vibrant flavors made from few ingredients, using the simplest techniques. Think Sophia Loren--and check out her recipe for Chicken Caccistora! Discover the joys of preparing a "timballo" like the pasta-filled pastry in the popular film "BigNight." Or simply rediscover how truly delicious, satisfying, and healthful Campanian favorites can be--from vegetable dished such as stuffed peppers and garlicky greens to pasta sauces you can make while the spaghetti boils or the Neapolitans' famous long-simmered ragu, redolent with the flavors of meat and red wine. Then there's the succulent baked lamb Neapolitans love to serve to company, the lentils and pasta they make for family meals, baked pastas that go well beyond the red-sauce stereotype, their repertoire of deep-fried morsels, the pan of pork and pickled peppers so dear to Italian-American hearts, and the most delicate meatballs on earth. All are wonderfully old-fashioned and familiar, yet in hands of a Neapolitan, strikingly contemporary and ideal for today's busy cooks and nutrition-minded sybarites.

Finally, what better way to feed a sweet tooth than with a Neapolitan dessert? Ice cream and other frozen fantasies were brought to their height in Baroque Naples. Baba, the rum-soaked cake, still reigns in every pastry shop. Campamnians invented ricotta cheesecake, and Arthur Schwartz predicts that the region's easily assembled refrigerator cakes-- "delizie" or delights--are soon going to replace tiramisu on America's tables. In any case, one bite of zuppa inglese, a Neapolitan take on English trifle, and you'll be singing "That's Amore."

A trip with Arthur Schwartz to Naples and its surrounding regions is the next best thing to being there. Join him as he presents the finest traditional and contemporary foods of the region, and shares myth, legend, history, recipes, and reminiscences with American fans, followers, and fellow lovers of all things Italian.

Iacclimated quickly to Naples. The palm trees in the park along the sea seduced me. The decrpiet Baroque splendor of the city stunned me...And, of course, there was the food. The catering shops carried all kinds of macaroni-filled pastries, individual size and huge ones to cut a wedge from; cakes of fried pasta, fried balls of rice, stacks of vegetable frittatas, baked lasagne, and ziti. There were fry shops with fritters and croquettes, trendy pizzerias with long pies sold by the meter, and traditional pizzerias, every surface white marble, where I first learned to eat pizza with a knife and fork. I indulged in pastries and baba every morning and afternoon, drank short, powerful coffeess all day, and finished each evening with a stroll and a gelato. I ate linguine with clams oin Posillpo (then took a nap on a jetty on the sea); drank Gredo di Tufo (whoite winer) and stuffed myself and buffalo mozzarella at every opportunity. I could see right away it was a tough place to eat through, so I kept going back for more.

There were still warm almond-studded taralli, rings of crisp lard dough, from a street vendor by the sea, pasta and beans on a nineteenth-century trattoria, lamb ragu and cavatelli in the hills of Benevento, goat ragu and fusilli in the Monti Alburni, squid and potatoes on Capri, rabbit braised in tomatoes on Ischia, fish stew at the beach near Gaeta, the lemon chicken in Ravello.
from the introduction


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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely loved this book for its authenticity., 30 Aug 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Naples at Table (Hardcover)
I am a regular listener of Arthur Schwartz's daily radio program and I anxiously awaited this book's publication. My family are from small towns in the Benevento area of Campagna and Arthur's recipes are the familiar food that I grew up with. He is the only person I know of who wrote about "Eggs in Purgatory". This was a regular Friday night supper in the days when meat was not allowed. All of these wonderful peasant dishes have now been "discovered" by people who are interested in healthy food. Our people ate them because they were inexpensive and I think Italians can make anything taste good! Bravo Arthur, you have done a great job!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Manificent effort in capturing the great cuisine of Campania, 15 Oct 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Naples at Table (Hardcover)
This new cookbook covers the cuisine of Naples and Campania, the cuisine which most Italian-American food is based. I am especially excited about this book because Mr. Schwartz has done a magnificent job of capturing the essence of the delicious cuisine from the Campania Region of Italy. I recognize many of the recipes from the days of watching my grandmother prepare many marvelous meals. Happily there are many recipes in the book that look outstanding with which I am not familiar. I can't wait to prepare many of these.

It was especially encouraging to read many of these beautifully explained recipes that were apparently carefully researched and fully tested until the author was sure that they would "work" as intended. His explanation of "marinara sauce and genovese sauce" alone were worth the price of the book for me.

It is one of the best cookbooks that I know of about the cuisine of Italy which is so highly Regionalized. Marcella Hazan's books used to be my favorites but these have been replaced with "Naples at Table". There are enough great sounding recipes to keep me busy preparing them for the next several weeks.

An added bonus is that the author has done a commendable job in connecting the interesting history of the Region with its cuisine.

It will be a present to many of my friends from me especially for those whose forebears came from Campania.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Extraordinary!, 19 May 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Naples at Table (Hardcover)
Mr. Schwartz has produced an outstanding documentation of the traditional foods of Naples. His attention to detail and to retaining the authenticity of each recipe are commendable. The beautiful photographs that grace this book make it not only a terrific book to cook from, but also one that will look fabulous on the coffee table (after dinner, of course!). My hope is that Mr. Schwartz will now turn his attention to Apuglia (my Grandmother's birthplace--Grandpa was from Naples).
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