Читать онлайн «Bill’s Italian Food»

Автор Bill Granger

CONTENTS

Introduction

Pantry

Instant

Weekday

Slow

Dinner

Party

Sweets

List of Recipes

Credits

Notes

Copyright

About the Publisher

‘These people really know how to live,’ I decide every time I visit Italy. Italians look as if they’re thoroughly enjoying life as stylish extras on the set of Roman Holiday. They don’t suck coffee from disposable sippy-cups on the bus; they lean against marble bars and drink tiny grown-up espressos. They don’t dash down takeaway burgers over computer keyboards; they unwrap paper parcels of spiced salami or creamy cheese in shaded parks. And, while much of the world hums with anxiety in rush-hour traffic, the Italians dress up for the daily passeggiata before zipping off on a shiny red Vespa to eat gelato with a glossy-haired Audrey Hepburn ... My imagination has run away with me, but Italians do seem to have made some great lifestyle choices – just don’t mention politics, please! Sitting down to eat well with family and friends takes high priority, yet no stress accompanies that expectation and there’s a refreshing lack of artifice about what is put on the table. This country is the home of the slow cooking movement, yet no Italian would waste time faffing around with already-perfect fresh ingredients (how they must sigh at our foams and deconstructions). The regional dishes are as old as the hills they come from, yet the freshness of the ingredients gives them modernity. Rich and poor, all are able to eat well in Italy. It’s this joy of life and respect for food that I resolve to take home with me every time I visit. Yes, the Italians really know how to live.

If you need to cheat (and, goodness knows, there are plenty of times when that way sanity lies) you can buy all these bits and pieces at a deli or supermarket.

But, if there’s ever a lovely slow empty afternoon when you’re in the mood for pottering in the kitchen and stocking the fridge, here are some ideas to work with. They’ll give you the basic foundations for many Italian dishes and take the pressure off during the week. None of these are complicated, but all will lift any meal from basic to bellissimo. Home-made focaccia can make a meal out of anything – in the best possible way. And, while pasta with supermarket pesto isn’t a dish that generates much excitement, home-made pesto certainly does.

SOFFRITTO IN OLIVE OIL

Making soffritto in advance is a time-saving revelation. This finely chopped flavour base can be kept under a thin layer of olive oil in a jar in the fridge, or even frozen (without the oil). So if, like me, you’re often left with a couple of slightly less-than-crunchy celery stalks or carrots in the vegetable crisper, quickly dice, cook and keep.

Garlic, onion and celery make up the ‘holy trinity’ of much Mediterranean cooking and a finely diced soffritto is the base for just about any soup, stew, sauce or braise created on an Italian stove. I’m a bit of a rebel here: I tend to chop my ingredients a little less finely than the average Italian cook.