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Recipes

Fit for a prince

A summer salad with humble beginnings
by Rachel  Priestley (issue no. 126/2010 / July 1, 2010)
My latest consulting job finds me working for a prince in a palace surrounded by olive groves and vineyards. Among horses and children, fields of green grass and gardens, I am organizing traditional Tuscan gourmet picnics, lunches and cooking classes to …
Recipes

Tuscany meets Maine

Summer's star on two continents
by Marcella Ansaldo (issue no. 125/2010 / June 17, 2010)
This will be my fourth summer in Maine. When I first set foot in Maine, two friends of mine, Berno and Laura Hamilton, welcomed me into their home, a cottage behind a row of pine trees off the Sommes Sound. Berno drove me …
Recipes

Donald's lunchbox

The fine art of a simple pasta
by Rachel  Priestley (issue no. 124/2010 / June 3, 2010)
I went downstairs to eat at Fuori Porta the other day and was lucky enough to find my friend Donald walking in the door with some free time for an aperitivo. We enjoy chatting about politics, the weather (and how Italians …
Recipes

Belly full

Mollusk soup
by Marcella Ansaldo (issue no. 123/2010 / May 20, 2010)
My mother was pregnant with me the day her father took her to visit the kitchen of the cargo ship where he was working as the crew cook. My mother, being weak-stomached, immediately fell ill from the dense smell of paint, …
Wine + Drink

With a suitcase and a corkscrew

Taking a wine tour in Tuscany
by Deirdre Pirro (issue no. 123/2010 / May 20, 2010)
Of all tourists, wine tourists are among the most discerning, and Italy is hosting more and more of them, from all over the world. According to a report prepared by market researchers, Censis, and presented at Bit 2010, the International Tourism …
Recipes

Spring peas, more please!

by Marcella Ansaldo (issue no. 122/2010 / May 6, 2010)
Fresh peas are the true sweet stars of this season! They begin to appear up now, with the first warm days after the rain. Bright green and tender, they are newborn peas with an irregular shape, some even pressed as they …
Recipes

The kitchen garden

If I can't eat it, I don't plant it
by Rachel  Priestley (issue no. 122/2010 / May 6, 2010)
With spring well under way and with the puntarelle season now finished, it is time to start planting my garden for spring and summer fare: cetrioli, melanzane, pomodori, pomodorini, basilico, zucchine, cipolle rosse, and more.   When the plant seller I recently visited …
Food Stories

In Florence, vegetarians find a full plate of options

by Robyn Baitcher (issue no. 119/2010 / March 25, 2010)
It was an unusually warm day in February when I set out with my two roommates in search of La Raccolta, a vegetarian restaurant and specialty store here in Florence. We headed east from the city center and walked arm-in-arm, passing …
Recipes

Don Blanco & the sausage scandal

Sweet spring salsiccia from scratch
by Rachel  Priestley (issue no. 119/2010 / March 25, 2010)
It seems that everybody is finally coming out of hibernation after a very long, very damp, cold winter in Florence (which even included a frosting of snow). However, although flowers are beginning to bloom and grass is beginning to send up …
Recipes

Artichokes, again!

Stuff them before the season is over
by Marcella Ansaldo (issue no. 119/2010 / March 25, 2010)
You know it is the last gasp of the artichoke season when the large, round, flat mammole and romani appear on the produce tables at the market. Mammole, the sweetest kind of artichoke, are purple with heart-shaped petals. Also the biggest …
Recipes

Straight to an artichoke's heart

Make a flan with this season's bounty
by Marcella Ansaldo (issue no. 118/2010 / March 11, 2010)
This winter has been exceptionally long and cold, but sparks of spring are starting to sprinkle through the air. Flowers bloom and market stands become crowded with heaps and heaps of big, beautiful artichokes. Although an artichoke's consistency is fibrous and …
Wine + Drink

Know your roosters

by Rachel  Priestley (issue no. 117/2010 / February 25, 2010)
‘Chianti,' one of the most famous words in the wine world today, is the source of much confusion. Maybe you tasted a great Chianti wine at a restaurant but when you later bought a bottle of Chianti, it just didn't taste …
Recipes

Pure Tuscany: pappardelle al cinghiale

Living the local cuisine
by Rachel  Priestley (issue no. 115/2009 / January 28, 2010)
In New York, London or Auckland you may be served ‘Italian' food in which basil pesto, for example, has been added to, say, orecchiette pasta and semi-dried tomatoes. No such marriage of regional specialties would work here in Italy, however. And when you observe a …
Recipes

Mid-winter pleasure: puntarelle

Living the local cuisine
by Rachel  Priestley (issue no. 114/2009 / January 21, 2010)
The holidays are over and we're midway into January. The month may be long and cold, but it is also the start of puntarelle season. I have only just discovered this vegetable, but, like someone in love, I don't remember what …
Insider Florence

La dolce Firenze

Sweet alternatives for the post-gelato season
by Tricia Manzanero (issue no. 114/2009 / January 21, 2010)
There is life beyond gelato. Even though many of my friends-devotees to chapels like Carraia that offer this creamy, frozen treat-would be appalled by this statement. In fact, they are probably now planning to force me on one of their daily …

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