Authors: Anthony Capella
Tags: #Literary, #Cooks, #Cookbooks, #Italy, #Humorous, #Contemporary, #General, #Romance, #Americans, #Large Type Books, #Fiction, #Cookery, #Love Stories
Re:re:re: that recipe for bruschetta
Aha! No, you’re not. And that’s my whole point.
To: Laura
from: Bruno
Re:re:re:re:that recipe for bruschetta
I mean, I don’t understand. How can you not be able to cook
bruschetta, when you can do all those other things? And what do you mean about needing somebody to show you?
‘… it is a pattern of cooking that can accommodate improvisation and fresh intuitions each time it is taken in hand, as long
as it continues to be a pattern we can recognise; as long as its evolving forms comfort us with that essential attribute of the
civilised life, familiarity.’
Marc ella Hazan, The Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking
Ś
To: Bruno
From: Laura
Re:re:re:re:re:that recipe for bruschetta
Well, it’s like this…
I was talking to my cooking teacher the other day. She says she
knows of at least a dozen Italian restaurants over here where
someone who’s cooked at Templi could get a job …
What do you think?
To: Laura
From: Bruno
Re:re:re:re:re:re: that recipe for bruschetta
I think I’m on my way.
Want to send me a shopping list?
www. thefoodoflove. com
I’d like to thank Nick Harris at A.P. Watt for putting the pot on the stove; Caradoc King and Linda Shaughnessy for giving it a stir; Bobby Thomson for tasting it; Peter Begg for showing me how a
real chef would do it; Alessandra Lusardi for adding some Italian flavours; Ursula Mackenzie and Clare Ferraro for ordering it; Tara Lawrence and Carole DeSanti for sending it back to the kitchen;
and of course my family, for a much-needed pinch of salt.
This book is dedicated to the memory of Nunc Willcox, a good
man and a good friend.
The End.
Look out for Anthony Capella’s second novel
coming soon from Time Warner Books
THE WEDDING OFFICER
Anthony Capella
A sumptuous tale of food to heal the deepest wounds, of the
hungers of war and the bittersweet nature oflove.
Naive but already war-weary, twenty-four-year-old James
Gould arrives in Naples in 1944 as part of the Allied
administration. What he doesn’t anticipate is that this
involves eating a limited menu of fried Spam fritters and
dissuading beautiful Italian girls from marrying British
soldiers. James’s chance at true heroism arrives when a
German tank is sighted and he is caught in its path. However,
the tank is being driven by a fiery Italian girl, Livia Pertini, who is trying to get her home-made mozzarella to market.
The disaffected girls of Naples, sensing their chance, secretiy
arrange for Livia to become James’s cook, believing that a
man who has eaten well must surely be more amenable to the
idea of matrimony. Gradually, James falls in love - not only
with Livia, but with the language, tastes and zest for life of
Italy itself. But then the eruption of Vesuvius triggers a chain of explosive events that will force the two to flee behind
enemy lines and will alter their lives immeasurably.