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Food Wine the Italian Riviera & Genoa
Contributor(s): Downie, David (Author), Harris, Alison (Photographer)
ISBN: 1892145642     ISBN-13: 9781892145642
Publisher: Little Bookroom
OUR PRICE:   $22.46  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: November 2008
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Travel | Europe - Italy
- Cooking | Beverages - Alcoholic- General
Dewey: 641.220
LCCN: 2008009192
Series: Terroir Guides
Physical Information: 1.39" H x 4.28" W x 8.4" (1.82 lbs) 448 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Italy
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Most food guides for Italy suffer from the "too-much, too-little" syndrome. The territory is vast, yet for each city and village they rarely provide enough information. This guide focuses on a manageable territory-Liguria-and covers it in depth with an emphasis on understanding the local culture through its food. This is not an encyclopedic volume but a renowned food writer's highly selective guide to Liguria's authentic small eateries, culinary traditions, wine, wineries, food artisans, and gourmet shops. (The "big" restaurants are covered in a short and amusing sidebar that lists the places that everyone knows and can read about in any guide or on the Internet: a tip of the hat to the great toques, but many other suggestions are given so the reader can dine elsewhere. In Italy, the restaurants Michelin rewards with multiple stars have little to do with regional or local food.) Recommendations center on "where the locals eat." The book is also lavishly photographed, perfect for the armchair traveler. There is a glossary of food items and unusual specialties, as well as a typical Ligurian menu, detailed indexes, many sidebars, and a map.

Learn all about the savory Ligurian flatbread called farinata (and where to buy farinata baking pans), garlic (raw in local dishes, braids, the pink heirloom variety from the village of Vessalico, and the village's annual garlic festival), pesto mania (and a profile of the hothouses of the western Genoese suburb of Pr that produce what most Italians and 99.9 percent of Ligurians claim to be the world's best commercially grown basil) and which restaurants serve authentic mortar-and-pestle-made pesto, as well as dozens of other regional topics.