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Mario Batali - Molto Gusto: Easy Italian Cooking

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Mario Batali Molto Gusto: Easy Italian Cooking

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Recipes from Molto Gusto

Summer Caprese Salad
Serves 6

10 ounces fresh mozzarella
1 pounds assorted ripe tomatoes (choose a combination of colors, types, and sizes), such as Brandywine, purple Cherokee, cherry, pear, peach, and/or Green Zebra
2 tablespoons champagne vinegar
6 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 small bunch basil (Genovese, lemon, Thai, or fino verde), leaves removed, or about 1 cup mixed fresh basil leaves
Maldon or other flaky sea salt

With a sharp knife, cut the mozzarella into -inch-thick slices. Transfer to a serving platter, reserving any milky liquid from the cheese in a small cup.

If using cherry or grape tomatoes, cut them in half; reserve the juices. Core the remaining tomatoes and slice them, reserving the juices. Arrange the tomatoes on the cheese.

Whisk the vinegar, reserved tomato juices, any liquid from the mozzarella, and the olive oil together in a small bowl.

Tear the basil leaves over the salad. Pour the vinaigrette over it, sprinkle with salt, and serve.

Spaghetti alla Carbonara
Serves 6

Kosher salt
5 ounces sliced pancetta, cut into -inch-wide strips
cup extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon coarsely ground black pepper
6 fresh large eggs
1 pound spaghetti
cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, plus extra for serving
cup grated pecorino romano

Bring 6 quarts of water to a boil in a large pot and add 3 tablespoons kosher salt.

Meanwhile, combine the pancetta and oil in another large pot and cook over medium-high heat until the pancetta has rendered some of its fat and is lightly browned, about 7 minutes. Stir in the pepper and remove from the heat.

Separate the eggs, being careful to keep the yolks intact, putting the whites in a small bowl and the yolks in a shallow dish.

Drop the pasta into the boiling water and cook until just al dente. Drain, reserving cup of the pasta water.

Add the reserved pasta water to the pancetta and bring to a simmer over medium heat. Add the egg whites and cook, whisking furiously, until they are frothy but not set, about 1 minute. Add the pasta, stirring and tossing well to coat. Stir in the cheeses.

Divide the pasta among six bowls, making a nest in the center of each portion. Gently drop an egg yolk into each nest and serve immediately, advising your guests to stir the yolk into the pasta so it will cook. Pass additional grated Parmigiano on the side.

Review

The breadth of vegetable preparations in Molto Gusto is infectious. Armed with Batalis suggestions, it seems, readers could tackle almost any vegetable they bring home. (Buffalo News (NY) )

If you could eat with your eyes, youd swoon while reading Mario Batalis MOLTO GUSTO. (San Francisco Book Review )

Genre : food Formats : EPUB, MOBI Quality : 5

Mario Batali: author's other books


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THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO
SUSI, BENNO & LEO
for whom gusto is a way of life MARIO

I WOULD LIKE TO THANK MY FAMILY,
CHRISTINE, RILEY & JASPER,
for their support and patience MARK

I would like to give special thanks to the following heroes in my funny world - photo 1

I would like to give special thanks to the following heroes in my funny world - photo 2

I would like to give special thanks to the following heroes in my funny world:

To SUSI, BENNO , and LEO , who keep me happy with smiles and wit throughout every single day of our lives

To JOE BASTIANICH , my business partner, and the playahz on our teams at all of B&B Hospitality Group, whose work gives us inspiration and keeps the humor flowing

To PAMELA LEWY , my communications director, whose diligence and intelligence keep the wheels on the whole bus, and other buses too

To JUDITH SUTTON , for making a book out of our chicken scratches and for testing the recipes for the real world

To LISA EATON and DOUGLAS RICCARDI , for all of the damn beauty and thought

To chef DAN DROHAN , for running Otto smoothly and at full tilt all of the time

To chef MEREDITH KURTZMAN , for the sweet stuff and constant thought in the cool world of desserts

To DENNIS MULALLY and the core of the Otto staff, for making Otto Pizzeria every day

To QUENTIN BACON and LAUREN VOLO for wisdom velocity and beauty of image To - photo 3

To QUENTIN BACON and LAUREN VOLO , for wisdom, velocity, and beauty of image

To PAMELA DUNCAN SILVER, PAOLA RAMIREZ , and KARIN OLSEN, for plates, settings, and thoughts

To DANIEL HALPERN, GINNY SMITH, RACHEL BRESSLER, JOHN JUSINO , and LUCY ALBANESE at Ecco, for being the successful ones in their strange business

To JOHN FARBER , for thoughtful and sage advice and follow-through

To DARCIE PURCELL , for helping build the mountain and the Mario Batali Foundation

To TONY GARDNER , my agent, for watching the deal, and to CATHY FRANKEL, my lawyer, for watching everyone else

To JUAN MIGUEL and JULIE PANEBIANCO , for unswerving support and humor

To my partners at COPCO, CROCS, VIC FIRTH, GIA RUSSA, DCI CHEESE, ERNST BENZ , and FRAPP PRODUCTIONS , for vision and perseverance

To JIM HARRISON , for the voice in my head asking me about naps and lunchtime

From Mark

I would like to thank my partners, Mario, Joe, and Jason, for their inspiration and vision

And I would like to thank everyone at Lupa, Otto, and Del Posto for their dedication and hard work!

I have written and spoken perhaps too many words about Italian food and how and - photo 4

I have written and spoken perhaps too many words about Italian food and how and why I translate its inherent excellence and deliciousness to the American table. I have been on and in several thousand television shows and explained to a very large audience the philosophy of the Italian family, the importance of the table in daily life, and the significance of regional variations and the fierce respect and love for these regional differences from town to townand even from home to home on the same street. I have and will continue to espouse this Italian strategy, and I love to interpret it and illuminate it for the many of us who are Italians, whether or not we were born therethat is, we have ancestral roots thereand for the many of us who merely want to be Italians, at least at the dinner table.

Us is a big word these days, and I do not use it lightly. Who are we? By we, I mean those like-minded individuals who seek out the delicious, the traditional, the innovative, the unique, and the geo-specific in the world of nutrition and pleasure at the table, almost always in the company of others like us or of the same mind. We like to shop for food and prepare it, we like to braise, roast, poach, and steam. We have some but not all of the equipment we have seen on the cooking shows, and we have access to many great regional ingredients in our own towns. We lust after the first asparagus of the season, we anxiously await the first local strawberries or cherries, and we are not afraid of either simple or many-step recipes. We love the change from merely slicing tomatoes and adding salt to complex braising as summer fades and autumn slides in. We sometimes plan menus for get-togethers weeks, or even a month or two, in advance. We are the cooks the houseware companies want to sell to. We are the readers of Food & Wine and Bon Apptit and of the local newspaper food pages, and we are the core audience of anything written by Michael Pollan, Mark Bittman, and Alice Waters. But we are not snobs or elitists, and we love it when other people cook for us. We like simple food.

In the last few years, the idea that there are social costs associated with the decisions we make at the grocery store and at the table has become quite compelling. At all of the restaurants I own, we have spent significant time thinking these decision-based costs through, and we have taken many steps to prove our pro-planet resolve, never at the loss of flavor and pleasure, but often in the face of seemingly significant profit motives. Among other things, we no longer sell imported bottled water, a reflection of our thoughts on the use of limited resources in energy and other raw materials we consider important. We have become green-certified at nearly every location, installing efficient lighting, composting our carbon-based waste, and recycling all plastic and glass. We are buying hormone-free meat and poultry products, and in many cases we have driven our menus to a place with less and less protein as the main event. At no place is this drive toward less protein more evident than at Otto Pizzeria Enoteca. The idea that our protein-heavy diet has far-reaching implications, including energy and resource management as well as global warming, may seem new, but the traditional agrarian European diet is actually anything but hot off the press.

What seems to be all the rage in the smart world of foodies is simply an extension of the traditional Italian table

We created Otto Pizzeria for one basic reason, to give us a place to go with our kids that made sense in the big three for families: (1) to have fun; (2) to be able to find something the kids want to eat at the same place where the adults want to eat; and (3) to serve both adults and kids something that is good for them but, at the same time, deliciouswithout having to resort to the didacticism and sloganeering language that health food restaurants are trapped by. In the true world of Italian meal ideology, this is not as hard as it might seem when you look at that list: we simply created a menu that doesnt require a huge commitment to any particular or specific course. The typical meals may change from day to day, but most people have some vegetable antipasti and a leafy salad or two, maybe some cheeses or salumi, and then split a few pastas and a few pizzas and share a couple of gelati and coppette. I do not think that after our first year anyone even noticed that there are no standard meat- or fish-based main courses served in the restaurant. And if you have been paying attention to the current food brain-trust literati, it seems that our customers were ahead of the curve. Not really vegetarian, theyve nonetheless been eating a diet heavy on vegetables, mostly leafy, with some grains thrown in, in the form of pasta and pizza, plus farro and legumes in salads, and very little protein from animals.

What you will certainly notice quite quickly is that this cookbook is radically different from all of the others I have written in its complete lack of traditional main courses. We do not serve any meat and potatoes plates at Otto, and we never have. What seems to be all the rage in the smart world of foodies is simply an extension of the traditional Italian table, where farming, foraging, and gardening have always yielded the bulk of the food in the daily diet, and where the occasional pig, chicken, or cow has been the exception to the rule. The health implications of this style of diet are no new shakes either, but I think that what you will note when dining on the following group of recipes is a kind of happy passing sense of content and fullness not associated with the consumption of a huge steak or chop. Most of the protein comes from small portions of cured meats, cheeses, and grains, with any animal protein as the flavoring and the bulk of the actual comestibles plant-based, whether leaf, stalk, flower, seed, or drupe. An ideal meal for several people from this book might consist of two or three vegetable antipasti, and a salad, followed by a pasta or two and a cheese course. Or maybe a plate of salumi and then some pizzas, with a couple of gelati and a coppetta or two.

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