Flavors of Tuscany
For the last twenty-five years, Nancy Harmon Jenkins has spent
a good part of her time with her family in the hills of eastern
Tuscany in an antique stone-walled farmhouse surrounded by fields,
vineyards, and forests of oak and chestnut. Working through the
seasons, gardening, marketing, cooking, and sharing food and its
lore with Tuscan friends and neighbors, she has developed a deep
attachment to the cuisine of the Tuscan countryside, to which she
brings a unique perspective as one of this country's foremost food
writers.
Often imitated but seldom clearly understood outside Italy, Tuscan
country cooking is hearty and appealing in its simplicity and its
straightforward insistence on fresh, authentic, unadulterated avors--fragrant,
homey herbs like parsley, sage, and rosemary; the lush, peppery
aromas of newly pressed extra virgin olive oil; the appetizing redolence
of farm-raised chickens braising in a wood-fired oven; or spitted
pork loin, basted with garlic and wine, roasting on the hearth.
Drawing on her extensive firsthand experience, Jenkins has re-created
for American cooks and the American table the rustic, robust way
of cooking and eating that is the heart of Tuscan life, the avors
of Tuscany.
Flavors of Tuscany features more than one hundred recipes for the
dishes that provide the foundation of Tuscan cuisine. In addition
to finding simple instructions for baking the salt-free bread that
is more essential than pasta in Tuscan kitchens, cooks will learn
the ways that frugal Tuscans use leftover bread in soups like ribollita
and in salads like panzanella.
There are also recipes for bruschetta and crostini, the delightful
bread crusts piled with toppings that are served as antipasti, light
meals, and snacks. A garden-fresh array of vegetable recipes ranges
from humble potatoes braised with tomatoes or sautÚed with
garlic and rosemary to creamy beans stewed with olive oil in a traditional
Tuscan fiasco; from elegant spring asparagus with butter-fried eels
to a series of sformati, little unmolded puddings of seasonal vegetables
that are a favorite Tuscan first course. Handmade eel pastas, gnocchi,
polenta, and rice are also savory first courses, often served with
robust meat and wild mushroom rag¨s or delicate seafood sauces.
More than a cookbook or a recipe collection, Flavors of Tuscany
is a celebration of a way of life and an attitude toward food that
is as seductive as it is simple. Along with unforgettable sketches
of people and places that have appealed to her over the years, Jenkins
has included an indispensable section, "When You Go to Tuscany,"
that includes favorite restaurants and specialty shops.
To all this, Jenkins brings her special combination of skills:
a journalist's air for anecdote, a historian's passion for the story
of the past, and a gifted cook's appreciation of fine traditional
food and the people who create it, as well as a deep and abiding
love of Tuscany. The result is magic.
Nancy Harmon Jenkins is the author of a number of books, including
Flavors of Puglia and The Mediterranean Diet Cookbook. A contributing
editor to Food & Wine, she writes often for the New York Times
and other national and international publications. She divides her
time between Cortona, Italy, and the coast of Maine.
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