A Tomato Grows in Brooklyn

A Tomato Grows in Brooklyn

  • Downloads:6294
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-10-21 03:21:12
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:David Ruggerio
  • ISBN:B09H7SP1K6
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

Renowned chef and author David Ruggerio takes you back to Brooklyn and introduces you to the Italian-American experience and cuisine he knows, grew up with, and adores。 This humble cuisine reflects a beautiful narrative of joy, sadness, fatigue but always rich in humanity and heritage。

A TOMATO GROWS IN BROOKLYN is full of luscious pictures with more than 135 recipes that will make your mouth water。 With a bite of Involtini of Eggplant, a taste of Octopus in Warm Vinaigrette, a forkful of Carbonara of Artichoke, a morsel of Gnocchi all'Amatriciana, or a mouthful of Panna Cotta of Orange, Caramel and Figs, you will discover what makes the Italian American cuisine of Brooklyn unique。

Review
"David Ruggiero has crafted an outstanding book: an evocatively written memoir of a special time and place that nurtured his rise to culinary fame, and a compilation of irresistible family Italian dishes, many with a brazen Brooklyn accent。" -Bryan Miller, NY Times Food Critic

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Reviews

victoria frances

This book is a real education in Italian cuisine!Wow! I was brought up steeped in Northern Italian tradition, especially cooking the special dishes that were the staples of every celebration and holiday。。。and now I can compare them to the traditional foods of Southern Italy and discover how very similar our traditions are! I particularly love the recipes and the sources provided for special items that I could never find in Arizona, where I live now。 Thank you, Mr。 Ruggerio!

Janet

Publication date: October 12, 2021ttttttttttttttttttttttttttttThank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review an advanced reader's copy of this book。 This in no way affects my review, all opinions are my own。ttttttttttttttttttttttttttttFrom the publisher, as I do not repeat the contents or story of books in reviews, I let them do it as they do it better than I do 😸。tttttRenowned chef and author David Ruggerio takes you back to Brooklyn and introduces you to the It Publication date: October 12, 2021ttttttttttttttttttttttttttttThank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review an advanced reader's copy of this book。 This in no way affects my review, all opinions are my own。ttttttttttttttttttttttttttttFrom the publisher, as I do not repeat the contents or story of books in reviews, I let them do it as they do it better than I do 😸。tttttRenowned chef and author David Ruggerio takes you back to Brooklyn and introduces you to the Italian-American experience and cuisine he knows, grew up with, and adores。 This humble cuisine reflects a beautiful narrative of joy, sadness, fatigue but is always rich in humanity and heritage。A TOMATO GROWS IN BROOKLYN is full of luscious pictures with more than 135 recipes that will make your mouth water。 With a bite of Involtini of Eggplant, a taste of Octopus in Warm Vinaigrette, a forkful of Carbonara of Artichoke, a morsel of Gnocchi all'Amatriciana, or a mouthful of Panna Cotta of Orange, Caramel and Figs, you will discover what makes the Italian American cuisine of Brooklyn unique。THis is a beautiful book that sums up the Italian-ness of Brooklyn: simple yet amazing recipes that will tease your tastebuds and then leave them wanting MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE! The recipes are well written and understandable by cooks of all levels and the photos make the food very appealing to myself and other lovers of food out there。ttttttttttttttttttttttttttttI especially love the book because it uses mostly whole ingredients instead of pre-prepared and packaged foods。 My husband says that I never have any food in the house, only ingredients --- that is why I cook so much。 I also refuse to eat or cook with Frankenfoods such as "chick'n" and its 88 ingredients vs。 🐔chicken🐔 having one and cheese that does not come from an animal is udder nonsense!)ttttttttttttttttttttttttttttAs always, I try to find a reason to not rate with stars as I simply adore emojis (outside of their incessant use by "🙏-ed Social Influencer Millennials/#BachelorNation survivors/Tik-Tok and YouTube Millionaires/snowflakes / literally-like-overusers etc。 ") on Instagram and Twitter。。。 Get a real job, people!) so let's give it 🍅🍅🍅🍅🍅 。。。more

Annie

Originally posted on my blog: Nonstop Reader。 A Tomato Grows in Brooklyn is a cookbook interspersed with warm memoir recollections by David Ruggerio。 Due out 12th Oct 2021 from Black Rose Writing, it's 252 pages and will be available in hardcover and ebook formats。 It's worth noting that the ebook format has a handy interactive table of contents as well as interactive links and references throughout。 I've really become enamored of ebooks with interactive formats lately。 For Kindle Unlimited s Originally posted on my blog: Nonstop Reader。 A Tomato Grows in Brooklyn is a cookbook interspersed with warm memoir recollections by David Ruggerio。 Due out 12th Oct 2021 from Black Rose Writing, it's 252 pages and will be available in hardcover and ebook formats。 It's worth noting that the ebook format has a handy interactive table of contents as well as interactive links and references throughout。 I've really become enamored of ebooks with interactive formats lately。 For Kindle Unlimited subscribers, this book is included in the KU subscription library to borrow and read for free。This is an unvarnished memoir written in chapters through Chef Ruggerio's childhood and professional life。 He talks plainly in a direct voice with the reader about his difficult childhood, trouble with the law, and eventual redemption and professional success as a culinary professional。 He is unabashedly plain spoken, brash even, and his recollections and reminiscences are often bittersweet。 He doesn't dwell on the tragedies (he was orphaned at 5 years old) or the systemic racism which Southern Italians experienced - they are just facts of life to be gotten around or compensated for。 What does come through clearly is his love of and respect for food and family which are inextricably entwined。 In fact, the recipes are gathered in each memoir chapter in a sort of stream-of-consciousness manner, and only coded with their uses: a (appetizer), b (breakfast/brunch), m (main course), c (side dish/contorni), and d (dessert)。 At least in the pre-release ARC I received for review, there was no comprehensive index, which will make the recipes a challenge to find without a systematic read-through of the book。 I was entranced by the brash style of the memoir and his unapologetic (and presumably) unvarnished reminiscences of growing up in the 70s in Brooklyn。 The comforting home life with scents of olive oil, tomatoes simmering with basil, and handmade traditional sausages are there, related on the same page as violence on the doorstep with drug abuse, stabbings, and murder。 The dichotomy is dizzying and somehow fascinating at the same time。 Recipes are written with names in both Italian and English, the aforementioned code (breakfast, appetizer, main dish, dessert), an introduction and recipe ingredients listed bullet-style in a sidebar。 Ingredients are given with American standard measures (no metric equivalents given), followed by step by step preparation instructions。 Roughly a third of the recipes are accompanied by photographs。 The food is not overstyled and looks genuinely appetizing and real。 Serving photos are appealing and appropriate。 Most recipes are written for family sized portions (generally 4-8 servings, sometimes more)。 There are a number of "fancier" dishes which aren't generally available outside of specialty cookbooks, as well as quite a number of specific holiday recipes (Saints days, Christmas, etc)。 My major problem with the book was the apparent lack of a table of contents or index。 Both of these issues are possibly fixed in the release copy。 The memoir itself is quite worthwhile and I compensated for the lack of index by bookmarking recipes I wanted to revisit as I read through the book。 Not ideal, but workable。Three and a half stars, rounded up for the unvarnished and enlightening memoir。 Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes。 。。。more