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Red Sauce Renaissance: How Italian Food Seduced America

Spaghetti with Meatballs, Chicken Cacciatora, Shrimp Scampi…all evoke red-and-white checkered tablecloths, candles in Chianti bottles, and Dean Martin on the jukebox. Indisputably Italian-American, these dishes are unknown in Italy.
 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PRLog (Press Release)Sep 27, 2007 – In 2004,  Skip Lombardi’s cookbook Almost Italian captured the hearts of  Italian-Americans with  kitchen anecdotes  and recipes gathered from scores of  Little Italy  communities. Currently unfolding on the World Wide Web, his greatly expanded and illustrated second edition of Almost Italian is making readers hungrier than ever as they wait for the next installment.

Now anyone can read Almost Italian (2nd Edition) on-line. The postings began September 19, 2007 and will continue until the entire book has been offered to readers. Reader access to the on-line edition (http://almostitalian.com) is free of charge.

Mr. Lombardi celebrates the spirit of Italians who arrived in America  during the huge waves of European immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  Rich culinary traditions accompanied even the poorest Italian immigrants who settled here and found a gastronomic landscape of both limitation and opportunity.

Initially, some of the ingredients essential to their cooking—olive oil, sheep’s milk cheeses, and even pasta—were unavailable. But at the same time, the new immigrants were amazed to discover they could afford other ingredients that, in the old country, had been out of their financial reach—most notably larger quantities of meat and chicken.  Both lack—and abundance--inspired an entirely new cuisine, what we have come to know as Italian-American.

The 2004 edition was a collection of  87 recipes. Though indisputably Italian-American, most of the dishes were virtually unknown inside Italy. But times—and food—have changed. Some dishes of American invention have begun appearing on trattoria menus in Italy. American-Italian cuisine itself is constantly evolving as more of us travel to Italy and come back with our own notions of what’s Italian. Once-exotic imports sold only by specialty grocers in urban Little Italys are now supermarket staples in towns across America.  And thanks to advances in Internet technology, those who produce, sell, cook, or simply enjoy Italian ingredients can converse and interact as never before. The network for food research—and sharing the pleasures of the table--has grown exponentially.

“More than ever, the medium is the message,” explains Mr. Lombardi,  “so my editor and I thought: why not serialize the second edition of Almost Italian as an online blog.

“In September, I began posting what will eventually be the entire second edition of the book, beginning with a revised introduction. As my editor and I work through my material (much of it new to this edition), I’m planning to publish two or three recipes each week on the Almost Italian blog.

“The recipes will range from antipasti to dolci.  For me, the stories behind many old favorites--dishes like Caesar Salad, Clams Casino, Cioppino, Lobster Fra Diavolo, Stromboli, and Veal Parmesan--are as delicious as the preparations themselves, and I can’t wait to share them. So, I encourage readers to bookmark the blog and check in often to enjoy each update as soon as it is posted."

“As I move along with the project, I’ll be soliciting my readers’ participation. I want them to realize that the culinary history of Italians in America belongs to all of us.  I’ll be asking them to email me stories, old photos, recipes, menus—anything they want to share. For any material I choose to post on the blog, I’ll be delighted to include a credit and a link back to the contributor.  The second edition of Almost Italian will reflect the fact that the Internet makes it easier than ever to be part of a community.”

Skip Lombardi, a professional musician, food writer and chef, grew up in an extended Sicilian-American family in which his maternal grandparents carried on the food traditions of Sicily-- baking bread, curing olives, and tending their backyard grape arbor. But his real exploration of food began when he had yet another career, as a software designer, and  moved  to what he calls  “Boston’s Red Sauce District,”  the city’s historic, Italian North End.

“During my 25 years working in the software industry, I had the privilege of living not only in Boston, but in a neighborhood where the scent of gently frying garlic made me appreciate that I was just where I was supposed to be,” says Mr.Lombardi.

Though he misses the North End, Mr Lombardi says “I think of the Web as the perfect kitchen in which to combine my experiences in programming with my affinities for prosciutto, pasta, and pecorino Romano.

“ My fundamental belief --that there is no situation that can't be improved by a  plate of pasta sauced with a little of my nonna's marinara--remains unshaken," proclaims Mr. Lombardi. "Nonetheless, I  believe this second editon of Almost Italian will be a different and far more engaging book than the one published just three years ago.

"I look forward to sharing my passion for food with a new audience, and with everyone who enjoyed the first edition.

Buon appetito
Media contact: info@almostitalian.com
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Issued By:Skip Lombardi
Website:http://almostitalian.com
Contact Email:Click to email
Phone:941.330.8738
Address:1718 Prospect Street
City/Town:Sarasota
State/Province:Florida
Zip:34239
Country:United States
Categories:Food, Media, Publishing
Tags:Italian Immigrants, Italian-american Food, Italian Restaurants, Italian Recipes, Almost Italian
Shortcut:www.prlog.org/10032242

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