10243 16 Volume Cook book!

la Repubblica is starting (on September 1) a series of rather nice looking hardback cookery books, each one of the sixteen covering a different regional cookery and local alimentary specialities.

The first one (on Puglian food) available with the newspaper on Sept 1st costs only €1.90 as an introductory offer. (The rest will cost €12,90 each.)

Sounds a bit expensive, I know, but it's probably worth getting the Puglia book at least.

Category
Food & Drink

It all depends on the type of collection you end up having. I buy lots of cookery books at it is an expensive hobby. But if the collection is a good one, it would be worthwhile.

Gala, and they can be an extremely good investment. My husband has been searching on line off and on for years to find me a first edition, hard back, Elizabeth David, Italian Cookery (1954). He hasn't had any success, despite being prepared to pay. (If anyone knows of a copy, please PM me.) And I recently purchased an obscure volume on southern Tuscan cooking that sold very badly when published 30 years ago but now, in good (not mint) condition,
commands £40.
Cookery books can be interesting from a historical perspective as well as useful advice on what to eat. I often dip in to my late mother's collection of books from the 50s and 60s (especially the 60s) just to get a feel for what people were eating then, and how they were preparing it.

[quote=Violetta;97148]Gala, and they can be an extremely good investment. My husband has been searching on line off and on for years to find me a first edition, hard back, Elizabeth David, Italian Cookery (1954). He hasn't had any success, despite being prepared to pay. (If anyone knows of a copy, please PM me.) And I recently purchased an obscure volume on southern Tuscan cooking that sold very badly when published 30 years ago but now, in good (not mint) condition,
commands £40.
Cookery books can be interesting from a historical perspective as well as useful advice on what to eat. I often dip in to my late mother's collection of books from the 50s and 60s (especially the 60s) just to get a feel for what people were eating then, and how they were preparing it.[/quote]

I have pm'd you!

2 books on Italian cookery I always consider as the best are:
1. Made in Italy - Giorgio Locatelli
2. The Silver spoon - Phaidon press (Original Italian version also available).

Also, anything by Valentina Harris, Gennaro Contaldo, Anna Del Conte and Antonio Carluccio.

I totally agree Biagio and on top of that I have at least a dozen others. Antonio Carluccio is my favourite because every single recipe he writes WORKS.
Those in Abruzzo may like Food & Memories of Abruzzo. Italy's Pastural Land by Anna Teresa Callen It's American, pub by Wiley. I always check out [url=http://www.abebooks.co.uk]AbeBooks: New Books, Secondhand Books, Rare Books, Out-of-Print Books[/url] as well as Amazon's UK site and try to buy second hand.

Any of the books by Lorenza de Medici, suh as "Italy Today, The Beautiful Cookbook" or "Tuscany, The Beautiful Cookbook" are just..... beautiful.

While I was in Italy, I was able to buy three of the volumes from "La Repubblica"'s collection, the ones on Ligurian, Tuscan and Sicilian cooking. Excellent reference books and good value for money. My advice is to buy them if they are still available.

Never mind all this media driven, modern, fancy Italian food prepared by even fancier chefs.
It's about time everyone went back to real good old fashioned Italian cooking done the traditional way.
Here is the perfect book on Ebay to get everyone back on track.
Don't be caught not having a copy in your kitchen. :winki::bigergrin:

[URL="http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ITALY-Fanny-Cradocks-Common-Market-Cookery_W0QQitemZ110308655577QQcmdZViewItem?hash=item110308655577&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14&_trkparms=72%3A1301%7C66%3A2%7C65%3A12%7C39%3A1%7C240%3A1318"]Italian cooking alla nonna![/URL]

Actually, the collection deals mainly with traditional cooking and gives plenty of information about the origin of certain dishes. It is in Italian, though.... so it may be a problem for those who are struggling with the language, although it is a good way to learn more.
But thank you for the tip, I also agree that traditional cooking is the best.

OK, own up. Who bought the cookbook on Ebay? :eeeek::bigergrin:

"moved to italiauncovered.co.uk"

[quote=IRITALIA;102418]OK, own up. Who bought the cookbook on Ebay? :eeeek::bigergrin:[/quote]

Not me.....:no:
My husband will divorce me if I buy more cookbooks!
But obviously, somebody followed your advice......:yes: