A celebration of Sicilian food describes the history of the island's cuisine, from antiquity to the present, and provides a selection of one hundred recipes
How good it feels to immerse myself in the warm, welcoming world of Sicilian cooking and food ritual. It's a place I love going to, and this book gave me a lot of historical insight into things that left me verschmeckled on my visit.
The recipes, oh goodness, the recipes! They sound like food porn, they are so good. I am not the first to experience this, as the following quote from an 18th-century French traveler shows:
"Almost all the ragouts {sauces} of the Syracusans are composed of pork meat, an indigestible food {!}, which can do no other than whip up the blood, heat it and render it into a state of orgasm and continual effervescence." (p157)
Now I have eaten a lot of pork (bad, nasty pun at your own risk) over the past 50 years and I have YET to have errrmmm this particular experience. What in Heaven's name are they feeding these pigs, and how do I get some?!
When I was through fanning myself, I continued into the joyously brimming recipe sections that followed, describing cannoli, pasta alla carrettiera, and a timballo di maccheroni bianco, which features in a superbly sensual passage of The Leopard, that delightful Sicilian novel. I want to see if I can reproduce the "...masses of piping hot, glistening macaroni, to which the meat juice gave an exquisite hue of suede."
This book is both an historical treatise on Sicily and a cookbook. Thick and scholarly, but readable and enjoyable. I tried some of the recipes with excellent results!
A beautiful celebration of the food of Sicily, from its history to the recipes of today. I love that way that Mary Taylor Simeti provides such detailed information about the origins of many of the dishes' ingredients, as well as the many cultures who have inhabited the island and contributed to a very rich Mediterranean cuisine. This book is accompanied by old engravings and drawings evocative of the history of the food and agriculture. A beautiful book, full of great information and great recipes!
A recipe book with long, wonderfully helpful introductions to the various categories of Sicilian food. I recommend reading it together with Simeti's companion book on Sicily On Persephone's Island: A Sicilian Journal. (Read my review of both books there.)
I don't envision myself actually making any of these dishes (but then, who knows?), but I certainly know what I am going to order on my next visit to Sicily's many wonderful restaurants. Heartily recommended as reading material for any planned trip to Sicily.