

🍝 Unlock Italy’s culinary secrets—one region, one recipe, one unforgettable meal at a time!
La Cucina: The Regional Cooking of Italy is a used book in good condition, featuring over 2500 authentic recipes from every Italian region. It serves as a comprehensive encyclopedia of traditional Italian cooking, emphasizing regional variations and rare ingredients. Highly rated with 4.7 stars from over 1,000 reviews, this book is ideal for serious cooks seeking to master Italy’s diverse culinary heritage beyond typical recipe collections.
| Best Sellers Rank | #100,063 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #132 in Italian Cooking, Food & Wine #140 in Cooking Encyclopedias #172 in Cooking, Food & Wine Reference (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,069 Reviews |
A**.
Best "Truly Italian" Cookbook I've come across.
Amazing Cook Book filled with recipes from literally all regions of Italy. The best thing about cooking Italian is that there is vast more variety than many other countries. Every region is covered including a few I'd never heard of. Some recipes call for ingredients that may not normally available in US grocery stores. Not to fear. Seems you can find even the most obscure ingredient at local Gourmet Food Stores, even here on Amazon. This is not your everyday "go-to" cookbook, but one to use when you are in the mood to prepare something different for a special occasion. With over 2500 different recipes, even if you prepare one every day, you'll be set for the next 5 1/2 years.
D**A
Not your typical cookery book
This is NOT a recipe book from a Food Network cook. There are no stories about how the author spent ages developing this recipe while their little ones scampered underfoot at their country estate. This is an encyclopaedia of Italian cookery. The authors went region by region, and asked for what dishes the locals made, and the variations thereof. There aren't a ton of super precise measurements, probably because nobody who's been cooking a long time needs to give exact proportions. You and I both know that if a recipe calls for a couple pounds of tomatoes, you're probably going to be using like 3 TB - 1/4 cup of oil to fry off your onions and garlic. You're probably going to throw in a handful of chopped/torn basil leaves. Like I said. This isn't your typical hold you by the hand type of book. If you wanted that, I'd suggest Marcella Hazon's Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking. There, she explains exactly what each ingredient is, and how much of it you should be using. However, if you want to know exactly what it is that makes a regional dish unique from how other regions make it, this is where you'd turn. You start noticing subtle differences in how each region treats various proteins, dairy, eggs, and grains. This is like if you wanted to preserve the classic recipes as they are made in each region, before they get made uniform for general consumption. To be honest, this could probably be a multi part series, with one giant tome just covering each region. This is an impressive effort, and I can spend ages flipping through the tome, and finding little pieces of history sprinkled through. A must have for anyone trying to reach that experience they had when wandering through the Italian country side.
L**E
Great layout, great recipes
This book is a treasure. I do not love Italian food when I go to restaurants, but, growing up I had a friend whose mom was Italian and made traditional dishes that were so good. This book has some great pasta, sauce, salad and soup recipes that have turned out delicious. The way the book is organized / laid out is very useful. It’s so big it’s hard to lay open the book to follow the recipe but this mean there are so many recipes in the book! Most of the recipes are easy to follow with not too many ingredients.
I**U
Best Italian cookbook
Great book, great recipes, every cook needs
A**A
Great Value for the Price
A lot bigger than I thought it would be, soooo super excited to try some recipes out!
N**T
An outstanding book, but beware of missing pages
I love this book but it's probably not for everyone. It has no photos and there is no overarching editorial voice. It is a collection of recipes made over half a century from all over Italy. You will often find several recipes for the same dish that vary considerably in substance, quality, and organization. They were written by many different people so sometimes there are detailed instructions and other times there are not. Some of the ingredients will be hard to find outside of Italy or outside of farming communities. I like to read through the book just to get new ideas for my own cooking. If you like food history you will probably love this book. If you want to follow step-by-step recipes you will find some great stuff here but would get more value from The Silver Spoon. If you want an introductory book you'd be better off with Essentials of Classical Italian Cooking by Marcella Hazan. WARNING: My copy is missing pages 579-594 and pages 595-610 are printed twice instead. I saw another reviewer who is missing pages that I have in my copy. It seems like there were printing errors. When I noticed this I contacted the publisher but they ignored me. I still think it's worth buying however. I almost gave it five stars anyway, and I certainly would if it weren't for the production problems, which I think potential buyers should know about. The design of the book is gorgeous and it's a pleasure to read. I have nothing against food photography, but so many cookbooks seem more like art books with some clever writing and a few recipes. I find it refreshing that this book has no photos. It is a wealth of great information if you're serious about food.
N**O
Perfect Christmas gift...jackpot!
My 30-year old foodie son was thrilled with this cookbook, even though it was not on his list. He and his wife travel extensively, and love Italian food. My sons loves the challenge of preparing new recipes, and this cookbook is chock-full of the yummiest of them all! A word of caution: this is NOT a cookbook for beginners: it is quite technical. This is proven by the lack of pictures, lol. I guess those foodie/chef types KNOW what any given recipe is supposed to look like when it's done, lol. Again, this cookbook is a HUGE hit with my son!
R**N
slight shortcomings, but worth every penny
While I am not 100% satisfied, this is a great concoction of recipes organized in a new way. What I'm missing is at least some yummy images (there is absolutely none of any kind) and an alphabetical index in addition to the 2 provided. As is, there is an index by region and another by main ingredient, but if you're after just something italian, you can't simply go to an index in an alphabetical order. I'm in a process of compiling my own as it is going to be invaluable. As a big plus, with a ton of recipes there is no BS included, just plain, concise description of ingredients and how it goes together. But it also means that this is not for a beginning cook, yet I think everyone can count on finding a cooking inspiration here. I love the fresh layout as well. This is just about as different as it gets in cookbooks. ..... As a side note: another reviewer cannot find classic "bolognese sauce" I can't either, which only adds to my above point of the need for an alphabetical index. I actually don't think there is "bolognese" in this one. While considered by many a classic, it has been the most bastardized meat sauce in culinary history. As such it may no longer fall within the fine Italian cuisine category. I'm just guessing here, but truth be told someone ought to go to jail for letting this sauce become a sour point of Italian cuisine
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