Lidia's Family Table: More Than 200 Fabulous Recipes to Enjoy Every Day-With Wonderful Ideas for Variations and Improvisations  this question feed

asked by linda on October 30, 2006 11:50 AM
Warm and calmly authoritative, Lidia Bastianich has won the trust of many cooks, who also devour her TV shows and books including Lidia's Italian Table and Lidia's Italian-American Kitchen. Lidia's Family Table also presents homey Italian fare--savory dishes like Cauliflower Soup with Poached Garlic Purée; Potato, Leek, and Bacon Ravioli; Skillet Green Beans with Gorgonzola; and Grilled Tuna Rollatini Under Tomato-Lemon Marinade--over 200 recipes in all. But Family Table is equally about technique; readers will find it crammed with instructive asides like "Using 'Pasta Water' to Make a Quick Sauce" (the water's starchiness can add body to sauces) and "Reduced Wine Vinegar for Vegetables" (heat-concentrated vinegar makes a deliciously mellow seasoning).

But the teaching doesn't stop there. Bastianich's discussions of risotto and polenta are particularly good (when preparing risotto, for example, the liquid must simmer for the dish to become properly toothsome), while a section on quick skillet sauces, like one made with sausage, onions, and fennel, will get many readers to the kitchen pronto. Bastianich also offers advice for preparing lesser-known yet attractive meat cuts like shoulder and butt, as well as quick-take recipes for the likes of whole corn cooked in tomato sauce and eggplant with scrambled eggs. The Bastianich approach also applies to the dessert section, which offers simple fruit-based sweets like Fig Focaccia, and Crostata with Poached Apricots and Pignolala. (Included, too, are a number of simple strudel recipes, a bow to the cooking of Istria, Bastianich's birthplace.) Color photos make succinct technical points as well as showing Lidia's extended family at table and very much in action. --Arthur Boehm


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More even than a chef, Lidia Bastianich is a teacher. I've been to her restaurants, watched her shows religiously and spent dozens of hours in the kitchen cooking her food for myself. Lidia's Family Table, especially when used in conjunction with the PBS series, shows us how to make Italian food. Yes, there are recipes. More importantly, Lidia teaches technique. I never make a recipe the same way twice; Lidia shows me what to do, and then I do it using the ingredients I prefer and have on hand.

For the first time in my life, I can really cook Italian food. Lidia is fabulous.
reviewed by speaker on November 26, 2006 4:29 AM

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We have always loved pasta and Italian Food and when I saw Lida on TV I just had to have her wonderful book. I love the rustic pasta's made with cici beans and whole wheat...we are using South Beach...and this book is wonderful for having our "cake" and eating it too. Wonderful reading...like a regular book...and easy complete directions and illustrations.This is a cook book for the experienced cook and the newly introduced to the kitchen cook.
reviewed by aries on November 26, 2006 5:29 AM

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