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Di Palo Lou - Di Palos guide to the essential foods of Italy: 100 years of wisdom and stories from behind the counter

Here you can read online Di Palo Lou - Di Palos guide to the essential foods of Italy: 100 years of wisdom and stories from behind the counter full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: Italy;New York (State);New York, year: 2014, publisher: Random House Publishing Group;Ballantine Books, genre: Home and family. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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    Di Palos guide to the essential foods of Italy: 100 years of wisdom and stories from behind the counter
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A century in Little Italy -- The regions of Italy -- Mozzarella -- Pecorino -- Ricotta -- Sea salt -- Grana padano and Parmigiano-reggiano -- Coffee -- Olive oil -- Balsamic vinegar -- Prosciutto -- Pasta -- Piave and other mountain cheeses -- Speck.;The ultimate guide to the finest foods of Italy from the oldest, most celebrated Italian market in New York City. In the heart of New York Citys Little Italy sits Di Palos, a family-owned food shop that has been the treasure of the neighborhood for more than a century. The four generations of Di Palos who have run this Italian specialty market have made it their mission to bring customers the finest old-world selections from Italy--handcrafted mozzarella, buttery prosciutto, estate olive oils, traditional artisanal pastas from throughout the country. Now, in one colorful volume, Lou Di Palo, great-grandson of the founder and steward of the family legacy, shares the vibrant history of this storied establishment and a lifetime of wisdom about the cuisine beloved around the world. Di Palos Guide to the Essential Foods of Italy takes you on a gourmet excursion through Italys twenty distinct regions, from Sicily to Umbria to Alto Adige. Each chapter highlights a specific food and its rich history, along with practical tips for selecting, storing, and serving it at home. Many include signature family recipes that have been handed down through the generations, including Grandma Marys Sicilian Caponata and Concetta Di Palos Meatballs, or recipes gathered from trips to Italy over the years, such as Trapani-Style Salted Sea Bass and Polenta con Formaggio Crucolo Fuso. Readers will discover, among many other things, the secret to a balsamic vinegar worthy of sharing only with ones closest friends, the proper way to prepare the perfect espresso, and the importance of looking for the Denominazione dOrigine Protetta--or the Protected Designation of Origin seal--which certifies that your food is a traditional, regional product. Complete with dozens of mouthwatering photographs, engaging anecdotes, and candid stories, and featuring a foreword by Academy Award-winning director Martin Scorsese, this immersive volume is part family narrative, part culinary odyssey, and part cookbook. Di Palos Guide to the Essential Foods of Italy is your ticket to the best Italian foods--without having to wait in line! Praise for Di Palos Of all the stores in all the world, Di Palos is probably my favorite.--Ruth Reichl If theres no Di Palos in heaven, I aint going.--Pete Hamill Lou Di Palo is a true ambassador of Italian artisan foods and he writes from his soul in this very informative and endearing book that tells the story of the Di Palo family and their commitment as purveyors of the best products that Italy has to offer. From how regional cheeses are made to the production of balsamic vinegar, Lous enthusiasm, wonderful stories of his food adventures in Italy, and beloved family recipes give the reader a clear understanding of the foods of Italy. Bravo!--Mary Ann Esposito, author of Ciao Italia Family Classics Before there was Mario Batali or Anthony Bourdain, there was Lou Di Palo, a true New York food celebrity.--Frommers Insightful, inspired, and from the heart. Lou Di Palo is an outstanding advocate for authentic products of Italy, building a virtual bridge between the United States and Italys bountiful pasture lands, farms, and vineyards--one taste at a time--across the country and his counter each day.--Pier Paolo Celeste, Italian trade commissioner, executive director for the USA--

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Di Palos guide to the essential foods of Italy 100 years of wisdom and stories from behind the counter - photo 1
Di Palos guide to the essential foods of Italy 100 years of wisdom and stories from behind the counter - photo 2
Copyright 2014 by Luigi Santomauro Map copyright 2014 - photo 3
Copyright 2014 by Luigi Santomauro Map copyright 2014 by Simon M Sullivan - photo 4
Copyright 2014 by Luigi Santomauro Map copyright 2014 by Simon M Sullivan - photo 5
Copyright 2014 by Luigi Santomauro
Map copyright 2014 by Simon M. Sullivan
Foreword by Martin Scorsese copyright 2014 by Martin Scorsese
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Random House LLC, a Penguin Random House Company, New York.
B ALLANTINE and the H OUSE colophon are registered trademarks of Random House LLC.
Photo insert, frontispiece, and chapter opener photography copyright Evan Sung
See for further photo credit details.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Di Palo, Lou, author.
Di Palos guide to the essential foods of Italy : 100 years of wisdom and stories from behind the counter / Lou Di Palo with Rachel Wharton; foreword by Martin Scorsese. First edition.
pages cm
Includes index.
ISBN 978-0-345-54580-0 (hardback) ISBN 978-0-345-54581-7 (ebook)
1. FoodItaly. 2. ItalySocial life and customs. 3. ItaliansEthnic identity.
4. Italian AmericansNew York (State)New York.
5. Cooking, Italian. I. Wharton, Rachel, author. II. Title. III.
Title: Di Palos guide to the essential foods of Italy.
TX360.I8D53 2014
641.5945dc23 2014018032
www.ballantinebooks.com
v3.1
T HIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO MY WIFE,
CONNIE, WHO SUPPORTED ME ALL THESE YEARS
AND GAVE MORE OF HERSELF THAN
I COULD EVER HAVE HOPED. WITHOUT HER,
THIS BOOK WOULD HAVE NEVER COME TO BE.
CONTENTS - photo 6
CONTENTS My family has been going to Di Palos for gen - photo 7
CONTENTS

My family has been going to Di Palos for generations My mother shopped at the - photo 8
My family has been going to Di Palos for generations My mother shopped at the - photo 9
My family has been going to Di Palos for generations. My mother shopped at the store back when it was a latteria, and Ive gone myself since I was a kid. Now, when I take my daughter to Di Palos, I feel like Im home. Heres Marie behind the counter in 1996, just like today. Martin Scorcese
B ack in the late 1930s my uncle Mike got a 16-mm camera and shot home movies - photo 10
B ack in the late 1930s, my uncle Mike got a 16-mm camera and shot home movies of our family. When I finally saw those images sixty years later, there was the fruit and vegetable stand in our neighborhood that my grandparents had briefly owned. They had it for only a few years before I was born. I had often heard about it and tried to picture it, and there it wasa small storefront, piled with tomatoes and celery and onions, among many other stands and carts on a street bustling with shoppers. Its a brief glimpse, but for me a precious one. That was the way it was in the old neighborhoods, before the supermarkets. The people from the old country and their children made traditional meals at home, and theyd buy the ingredients at the vegetable stands and the latteriasthey made and ate the food that they knew and that had always nourished them. It wasnt just sustenance; it was as much a part of what made them who they were as their language and their faith and their memories of home.
Of course, many things had changed by the time I was a teenager, but youd still buy fresh fruits and vegetables in outdoor markets and get your cheeses at the latteria. My mother used to go to a shop called Di Palos, which had started as a latteria. And she remained a loyal customer through the years as they expanded and started importing and selling more and more products.
In 2001, right after the terrorist attacks on 9/11, we made a little film about the old neighborhood for The Concert for New York City. I immediately thought to myself: We have to go to Di Palos. At the time, the store was just down the streetGrand Street, to be specificfrom where it is now. Both of my parents were gone by then, and everything in the old neighborhood was changing. My life had changed in many ways too since Id left, but when I walked into the store and saw Lou behind the counter, I was home. We bought delicious cheeses and meats and oils and balsamic vinegars; we talked with Lou and his wife and his brother and sister, just like they talk to everyone who comes into the store: It was as if the camera had disappeared. My daughter Francesca was with me, and she was just two years old at the time. Ill never forget Lou cutting her a little piece of ParmesanIts just like candy for children, he said. She loved it. On that day, Di Palos didnt feel like home only because it was back in my old neighborhood. It went deeper than that. The food, the familiarity, the time everyone took to talk to one another, the way Lou and his family offered a taste of this cheese or that olive oil to everyone in the storeit was the heart of the world I came from at its most generous.
And that world, that cultureit was alive at Di Palos, and it still is. If you walk through the neighborhood today, the dramatic changes that were happening in 2001 are now complete. There are historic tours that take you to this shop and that church, and Little Italy is mostly a memory. But not at Di Palos. And thats because Lou and his family adapted to the changes as they came. Back in 2001, Lou said that someone walked in one day and asked him what made him open an Italian store in the middle of a Chinese neighborhood. Over the years, Chinatown kept expanding, and new immigrants continued to come from Southeast Asia. But Lou and his family understood that this was simply the way things were. Di Palos is now next door to a Vietnamese sandwich shop, but they havent just kept their family business going but have deepened the practice of their own traditions and culture, which is based in generosity. Theyre not just selling food, theyre sharing their knowledge of where it came from, how it was grown and cultivated and prepared over the centuries in different regions of Italy, where different climates and landscapes and traditions yield variations in the taste and texture of different olive oils and cheeses and meats. My friend visited the store recently and heard Lous brother, Sal, tell a customer, Ive never worked a day in my life. For him, and for Lou as well, as youll see, the making and importing and selling and sharing of food, and the honoring of its origins, is life.
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