Or maybe 5 stars? I just woke up from a nap so am blurry-brained. I grew up going to this restaurant in NYC's Little Italy called Lunas. It wasn't fancy or elaborate, no sprinkled herbs or fruit on the side of the plate for effect, what it was was if you had a friend with an Italian Grandma from the Old Country who invited you into her kitchen, sat you down, threw whatever was bubbly in her pot or stove on a plate and plonked it down in front of you, conducting with her spoon Eat! Eat! Coincidentally enough, my husband also grew up in the NY area and HIS family also went to Lunas. Lunas was just down home pure plain fantastic Italian cooking. When we lived in Soho, we would often walk down to Lunas. And pick up some canolis to eat at home. Lunas is one of the places I've missed very much since moving to Seattle 22 years ago.
Quite a few of the recipes in this book have caused Richard and I to look at each other and say, This is like Lunas!
I've cooked lots of Italian before, but learned some subtle finishing touches. For instance, a. before you drain your pasta, take some of the water and throw it in the sauce - the starch will make the sauce attach itself to the pasta when you, b. mix the pasta and sauce all together before serving on plates. This is what restaurants do.
There's tips like this that I never thought of. And altho I am very competent about making up my own recipes when I need a fast dinner, Henry's style is an inspiration (after all he's on the run!) and I've picked up on some tips. Garlic, basil, and parsley (NOT oregano!) is the root of Sicilian Italian.
Also, Henry's descriptions of the places he's been and the foods he finds in different parts of the country are entertaining. Yep, I actually READ this cookbook! You remember Henry, right? The Ray Liotta character from GoodFellas. In the witness protection program. Remember when he and Paulie were in prison slicing the garlic with a razor? So yeah, Henry takes his food very seriously. Fortunately, no razor required.