The Art of Cookery


by S. Rosi, illustrated by P. Boldrini

publication year: 1995
hardcover, 165x245 mm, 144 pp.
100 colour illustrations

isbn 88-85957-14-5 English
isbn 88-85957-15-3 French
isbn 88-85957-17-X German
isbn 88-85957-19-6 Italian
isbn 88-85957-16-1 Japanese
isbn 88-85957-18-8 Spanish

EUR 12.00

Like all traditional cuisines, Florentine cookery has shown more than one sign of “corruption”. We are not referring to the greater and lesser innovations which are historically inevitable and have, if anything, enriched the city’s gastronomic heritage. No, we are talking about the use of vegetables out of season, and the outrageous re-working of basic dishes at the hands of inferior restaurateurs – truffle-flavoured tripe is just one example!

This eminently sensible book presents the city’s best-known recipes shorn of purist excesses, and completes them with lots of useful tips on how to get the best results out of each dish. The historical notes on the recipes’ origin are both quaint and interesting.

The book is “seasoned” with Paola Boldrini’s eloquent and quasi carnal illustrations.


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Illustrated above are one of the less known dishes of Tuscan cuisine – fried sage leaves – and a “poor” recipe ready in no time: the tuna and bean salad.