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Cambridge Five Spy Ring — Part 28
Page 39
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course the splendid recipes developeu by wilcaael £ tsa
and his Italian consultant Luigi Carnacina. These begin
with crostata di ricotta, a sweet first confected by the
__, ancient Romans, which displays an imperial talent for
" combining in one dish a variety of ingredients without
losing the separate identity of each. The mild, sweet-
= ened ricotta cheese custarteehich forms the pie’s base
is enhanced by rich marsala, lemons, oranges, taisins,
" citron and nuts.
The full range of Italian cooking provides a journey
ates
across space as well as time — from the spicy olive oil,
_, tomato and anchovy dishes of Sicily and Sardinia to the
-whimsical pastas of the southern mainland {for ex-
- ample, amorini — fat little cupids, and stavaleti —
i Jittle boots). Rome offers such specialties as a classic
~* lasagna and a mouth-watering gnocchi alla Romana —
baked semolina dumplings with butter and cheese. In
| — F the burnished cities of the north, golden butter, tawny
| «veal, pale lemons and saffron-tinted rice recombine in
. endless variations. Try the superb osso bucco (braised
: veal knuckles) or the unexpected counterpoint of rice
)= with lemon. Throughout, vegetables and fish abound:
; seein f petra ry
t
i'rarely boiled, they are braised, stuffed, baked or gently
[- ‘poached in combination with one another, with eggs,
*- spices, cheese or the aromatic smoked meats of the
“ countryside. Finish your meal with the superb Tialian
invention, gelati (ice cream), and have a sip of that
t civilized stomach settler, Fernet Branca, while waiting
i, eagerly for the forthcoming volumes on American, Rus-
Ce
Gloria Levitas is an anthropologist whose avocation is
cooking. :
! BOOK WORLD Mey 12, 1968 +
fa ee ee
Magazine is very good indeed. The recipes shuttle com-
fortably between the irreverent enthusiasms of the Far
West and the classic grace and urbanity associated with
Sacramento and San Francisco, This yeas the editors’ .
cullings are to be found in Cooking Bold and Fear-
leas (Lane Books, illustrated, 160 pp., $3.95; paperback,
$2.95). Primarily for men, and emphasizing barbecue
dishes, the book’s particular distinction is its successful
blending of Oriental, Western and Latin styles — often
in one dish. Corn roasted in a cocoon of bean sprouts
and chicken flavored with soy sauce, cardamon and
curacao are happy examples. Two superior dishes from
a second Sunset publication, Soups and Stews (same _
publisher, authors, 96 pp., $1.95), are Brazilian
feijoada and the Chinese Chrysanthemum Bowl. The
feijoada is a robust potpourri of beans, tongue, ham,
sausage, bacon and chunks of orange. The Chrysanthe-
mum Bow! is for omnivores: guests cook their own
crisply sliced portions of meat and vegetables in a
steaming broth, and afterward drink up the broth, en-
riched hy the hlendsd flaunre af the eanked fande end
we arp See are TOS Ul Ue TOGO LOWS Bia
delicately scented with chrysanthemum blossoms added
at the last minute. ae
The Form Journal's Cooking for Company, edited
by Nelt B. Nichols (Doubleday, illustrated, 431 pp.,
$6.95), is a cookbook whose hearty American dishes are
designed to please country people. The book is notable
for its quantity recipes and its “portables” — dishes de-
signed to be carried along to community dinners,
church suppers or large family outings. Most of the
meat dishes are unsophisticated medleys, but the pastry
{UA [NOOUCS), NO ML A pakdisious day ase dice saa, .
Im the absence of such essentials, she advises when aub-
stitutions may be made and when to get out the ham-
‘burgers and forget the whole thing.
I'd like to thank Frieda Arkin — her The Cook's
Companion (Doubleday, illustrated, 172 pp., $4.50)
saved me several hours of commansien with my burnt
pots. Her suggestions are equally useful in preventing
kitchen disasters or for use after they have occurred:
Did you know, for example, that spilled eggs can be
picked up easily if covered with salt and allowed to
set? Or that the proper way to ripen tomatoes is to
put them in a dark place?
Obviously Poppy Cannon’s New New Can-Opener
Cookbook (Crowell, 314 pp., $4.95) has a built-in
audience: all those who purchased and enjoyed her
previous efforts to transform canned goods into cali
nary delights. Frankly, I’m unimpressed by this latest
venture. The section on soups is creditable, but I have
serious reservations about any book that suggests the
use of canned potatoes (pasty and bland) or macaroni
(a mushy disaster).
To end on a sweeter note, there’s William I. Kauf-
man’s The Chocolate Cookbook (Doubleday, 168
pp-, $4.50). Its author has happily resisted the tempta-
tion to offer meat in chocolate sauce (the Mexican
molé that sets my teeth on edge) and has confined him-
self to a catholic selection of desserts. Like a scrump-
tious skillet souf}é made with coffee “and chocolate,
they’re all woefully, gloriously fattening — but thon,
isn’t everything? ; al
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