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Hardcover Enoteca: Simple, Delicious, Recipes in the Italian Wine Bar Tradition Book

ISBN: 0811828255

ISBN13: 9780811828253

Enoteca: Simple, Delicious, Recipes in the Italian Wine Bar Tradition

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Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$6.09
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Book Overview

An enoteca is more than just a place to have a quick glass of wine and a light meal or snack. It s a place to meet friends and relax in an inviting atmosphere. With more and more travelers returning... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

good book

This book is very nice and has interesting food in it. The pics are very nice as well. Surprising how simple Italian food really is.

Excellent, Inexpensive source for Italian Entertaining

`Enoteca' by noted Mediterranean culinary writer and teacher Joyce Goldstein is one of those rare books which rekindle one's interest in an area the reader believed has been almost totally burnt out by reading dozens of books on, for example, general and regional Italian cookery. The Enoteca is a Greek based word for an Italian wine bar similar to the Spanish tapas bar and the Greek and Turkish meze bars. There is a strong similarity between an osterie, an older term, and the Enoteca, as both serve wine and neither have a full trattoria style menu. The Enoteca may even not have any tables, but it will most certainly have a wide variety of wines and a selection of foods which may be made on the premises but which may as likely be brought in from nearby food stores and restaurante or trattoria kitchens. The best American model I know of is Mario Batali's Babbo `restaurant and Enoteca', where the emphasis on wine selections supported by partner Joe Bastianich supports the dual function for this establishment. The fact that while the term Enoteca may be old, it has been enthusiastically adapted by the Italian culinary establishment which has gone so far as to codify the requirements which allow a business to label itself an `Enoteca'. These requirements are largely based on the bar's stocking a large number and variety of Italian wines, plus a sizable stock of French and other foreign wines. The Enoteca model seems to be primarily a northern Italian thing, with strong exemplars in Venice and Milan. One of the most attractive things about this book is the number of recipes for northern Italian dishes that mimic much more famous southern dishes such as the pizza and the Calzone. The official model for an Enoteca does not require that the servers are qualified as master sommeliers, but they must be very well informed about wine and how their wines can be paired with food. Ms. Goldstein's co-author of this book is her son, Evan Goldstein, who is a master sommelier and who supplies all the wine to food pairings in the book. As I know virtually nothing about wine, the only evaluation I can give of these offerings is that they are better than most, in that they define both the characteristics of the wine which will go well with the dish, then recommend specific wine labels, generally at least two different wines, often from two different continents. This is about as good a source of wine to food pairings I have seen in a cookbook. I almost have a sense that unlike the Spanish and Greek cuisine centers cited above, the Italian wine bar menu items have been lost in the great forest of information published about Italian cuisine. To be sure, almost all recipes in this book can be found in other major works from authorities such as Marcella Hazan and Giuliano Bugialli, but this particular collection of recipes just seems to come alive as they are presented to all satisfy a single purpose, being the most interesting finger food can be had to eat with a glass

best of the best

I love this book, good recipes and easy to make, and it's so nice to have the correct wines already chosen, takes the stress off me. 2 yums up!

Simple & Elegant

This is the trend we are heading into next, alot more simple fares and menus built around wine lists without being too stuffy.
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