Book Review

The Italian Country Table

Home Cooking from Italy’s Farmhouse Kitchens

By Kim Carlson
January 10, 2007

One of my favorite pasta books is Beard on Pasta, and one of my family’s favorite “recipes” from that book is hardly a recipe at all, but is more a suggestion of how to combine pasta with tuna, olives, and parsley (and lots of olive oil and garlic). It’s a quick, delicious dinner that the children gobble up.

Recently looking through my well-loved copy of Lynne Rossetto Kasper’s The Italian Country Table, I discovered something I’d missed earlier: the same dish, only here with a proper name, Friday Night Spaghetti with Tuna and Black Olives. Like James Beard, Kasper describes it as a quick dinner, but she draws upon on a few other ingredients — red onions, anchovy fillets, oil-cured olives, and capers — all of which deepen the flavor of the pasta and undoubtedly make it more authentically Italian. Even the children, who are now teenagers, agree this combination of ingredients is a welcome change of pace.

In fact, I’ve never cooked anything from Kasper’s book that I haven’t wanted to make again (the Ziti With Tomatoes, Capocollo, and Diced Mozzarella is outrageously good). In many cases, the introductions to the recipes are as long as the recipes themselves, but that’s because the author gives credit (often by name) to the many Italians whose recipes she adapts.

Kasper is well-known for her first cookbook, The Splendid Table: Recipes from Emilia-Romagna, the Heartland of Northern Italian Food, and for her public radio program, also called “The Splendid Table.” She’s an enthusiastic and generous cook, and this book is both of those things, as well.

Kim Carlson is the editorial director of Culinate.

Subscribe
Comments
There are no comments on this item
Add a comment

Think before you type

Culinate welcomes comments that are on-topic, clean, and courteous. For the benefit of the community we reserve the right to delete comments that contain advertising, personal attacks, profanity, or which are thinly disguised attempts to promote another website.

Please enter your comment

Format: Bare URLs are automatically linked; use this style: [http://www.example.com "place text to be linked here"] for prettier links. You may specify *bold* or _italic_ text. No HTML please.

Please identify yourself

Not a member? Sign up!

Please prove that you’re not a computer


Reviews

Culinate props open and ponders cookbooks, nonfiction, memoirs, and other books about food.

Want more? Comb the archives.

Advertisement
Our Table

Something to say?

Say it now — and enter our blogging contest

Our July blogging contest is underway.

Subscribe
Graze: Bites from the Site
 

Cookbook Fridays

T.G.I.F. for cooks: book giveaways

Opinion

The new foodie

One man’s call for creative thinking

Reviews

Food titles for grads

Three books for recent graduates

Local Flavors

Quelites love

A green of many names

Most Popular Articles

Editor’s Choice