Italian Vegetable Garden. Rosalind Creasy

Italian Vegetable Garden - Rosalind Creasy


Скачать книгу

      

images

      The

      Italian

       Vegetable

       Garden

      The Complete Guide to Growing and Preparing

       Traditional Italian-Style Vegetables

       ROSALIND CREASY

images

      Preface

      How do I say this politely: my mother and our live-in grandmother were dreadful cooks. Especially when it came to vegetables. For one thing, most of our vegetables were frozen, or worse, canned, and they were always overcooked. Ugh, I still remember not being allowed to leave the table until I ate them. And garlic—I never tasted it until I went to college! When I questioned my English-born grandmother about garlic, she said very matter-of-factly, “We’re not Italian.” It was a perfect storm—we weren’t Italian, my mom and grandmother didn’t know how to cook, and it was Massachusetts in the 50s.

      When I went off to college, I quickly learned that there was a whole world of food out there, and that I loved garlic! Of course most of it was on ubiquitous pizzas, and with pasta. That limited view changed in the early 70s when my husband and I traveled to Italy. It was clear that their cuisine was far more complex. In fact, an array of vegetables was integral to the meal, from the antipasto to the dessert; our first antipasto was cherry peppers stuffed with olives, another day it was a classic dish of “agliata,” a pungent garlic sauce served on grilled vegetables, and there were the grilled radicchios and young cardoon served with bagna cauda, (a hot garlic anchovy sauce), even a dessert tart made with chard. Contrary to what I—and most Americans—believed, Italians enjoy a long and broad cuisine based on vegetables. Over the last decades, as vegetarian and vegan movements have influenced all of us to include more vegetables in our own diets, we’ve come to learn that the Italian diet is in fact one of the healthiest in the world.

      Years ago Italian immigrants had to grow their own rich-flavored serpent garlic, “rocambole,” Tuscan black kale, arugula, radicchio, and countless more vegetables because they couldn’t find them in the grocery stores. In fact, they couldn’t even find the seeds to grow them, so they would bring their own or have folks send them. Thankfully, times have changed, and we are in the golden age of vegetables and herbs, many of them of Italian origin. But while most markets now offer an array of Italian greens, canned San Marzano tomatoes, and the ubiquitous basil, I’ve yet to see many of the classics, including cardoons, purple artichokes, pereroncini peppers, tender sprouting broccolis, rustic arugula, yellow Romano beans, Italian red garlics, much less nepetella and young dandelions. The bottom line—to really explore and enjoy authentic Italian cuisine, you need to grow many of these vegetables yourself.

      The great news is that over the last few decades dozens of dedicated seeds people, frustrated with the mainline vegetable seed companies and their meager Italian offerings, have started seed companies that specialize in Italian vegetables and herbs. Further, the now-popular heirloom movement has opened up vast seed libraries and seed swaps of classic Italian specialties. Never before have we had this much opportunity to explore one of the world’s greatest cuisines! With this book in hand you too can glory in a spring patch of wild Italian greens and show off a bountiful patio container of slim tender Italian eggplants and nepitella for a classic grilled eggplant and nepitella butter. And of course your trellis of San Marzano tomatoes will produce enough for many a killer pasta sauce.

      Bon Appetito!

images

      author Rosalind Creasy

images

      Contents

       The Italian Garden

       How to Grow an Italian Garden

       Picking & Growing Wild Greens

       Interview: The Sebastiani Vegetable Garden

       Italian Garden Encyclopedia

       Artichokes

       Arugula

       Basil

       Beans

       Borage

       Broccoli

       Cauliflower

       Cabbage

       Tuscan black kale

       Capers

       Cardoon

       Chard

       Chicories

       Dandelion

       Eggplant

       Fennel

       Lettuce

       Nepitella

       Onions

       Garlic

       Rocambole

       Oregano and sweet marjoram

       Parsley

       Shelling peas

       Peppers

       Spinach

       Squash

       Tomatoes

       Cooking from the Garden

       Preparation Methods

       Antipasto, Soups, Salads, Side Dishes, Pasta

       Interview: Paul Bertolli

       Gifts from the Italian Garden

       Basil in Parmesan

       Nepitella Butter

       Pickled Capers

       Dried Tomatoes

       Roasted Pimientos

       Mozzarella Marinated with Garlic, Dried Tomatoes and Basil

       Misticanza

       Classic Minestrone Soup

       Bruschetta with Tomatoes and Basil

       Radicchio and Corn Salad with Figs


Скачать книгу