Cookbook Corner: Friuli e Trieste in Cucina
Friuli e Trieste in Cucina by Mila Contini is part of a 20-volume series, with one cookbook for each region of Italy. From a design standpoint, the book is about…
Friuli e Trieste in Cucina by Mila Contini is part of a 20-volume series, with one cookbook for each region of Italy. From a design standpoint, the book is about…
Feste, Sagre, Fiere, Mercati in Friuli-Venezia Giulia by Paola Mancini and Adriano Del Fabro is primarily a guide to the festivals and markets of FVG, though as I'll get to…
The Celts were the first culture to use salt in preserving pork, and their arrival in the hill town of San Daniele del Friuli around 400 BC marks the origin…
Istria is the largest peninsula in the Adriatic Sea, extending from Trieste southward through sections of Slovenia and Croatia. The Quarnero, or Kvarner Gulf, separates the peninsula from the rest…
Friuli in Cucina: La Cultura del Cibo, Le Ricette was another of the first Friulian cookbooks I bought. The author, Adriano Del Fabro, opens with the declaration that, among all…
Cornmeal has been a staple in Friuli since the 16th century and for much of that time was considered a food of poverty. Corn was originally introduced into Europe by…
Montasio, Per Primo e Per Ultimo: dal Frico agli Antipasti, ai Dessert, edited by Giancarlo Re, is a compilation of recipes using Montasio, a cheese named after the mountain where…
Best described as an old-world fast-food counter, the buffet emerged from the habit of Trieste’s dockworkers and shopkeepers to take a quick midmorning snack, or rebechin (from the Italian ribeccare,…
La Cucina del Friuli-Venezia Giulia by Alessandro Molinari Pradelli is easily the most comprehensive reference on Friulian cuisine that I own. A veritable compendium, this cookbook contains over 600 pages…
Last month, I reviewed the cookbook La Zucca Si Sposa... by Germano Pontoni. In it are more than fifty recipes that "marry" winter squash to a number of different ingredients.…