Italian
Walnut-Raisin Cookies
(NOCELLI)
Walnuts star in several important specialties of the region of Liguria, including these easy-to-make cookies named after the Italian word for walnut, noce.
Spaghetti con Cozze Delle Marche
By Rose Gray and Ruth Rogers
Oven-Baked Ziti with Three Cheeses
A delicious take on lasagne, made with tube-shaped pasta instead of long noodles.
By Marie T. Mora
Frittata with Mustard Greens and Fontina
Hearty accompaniments would be grilled or broiled bell peppers and portobello mushrooms and a basket of crusty wheat rolls. In the Italian tradition, offer grapes, biscotti and espresso afterward.
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Angel Hair Frittata
An Italian dish that's great with brunch, or as a light lunch or appetizer on its own.
By Marilou Robinson
Mushrooms Vittoria
By Mary Alberghetti
Penne con Pomodori al Forno
This recipe comes from my 86-year-old grandmother, a northern Italian from Faenza, who picked it up during her travels as a piano teacher in southern Italy. I've watched her make it my whole life and know the recipe from memory.
By Vittoria Alberghetti and Pilar Guzman
Aunt Enza's Overstewed Green Beans
I, who struggled for years to achieve perfectly cooked, lively green beans love Aunt Enza's overstewed green beans, soft, almost creamy, tasting of bean, cooked far beyond crunch. Although Aunt Enza cooks the green beans in an onion and garlic-flavored tomato sauce she pointed out that leftover green beans can be subjected to the same treatment. Aunt Enza has a heavy Tuscan hand with extra virgin. I've cut down on the oil but my husband Massimo always adds a little extra at the table.
By Faith Willinger
Tacchino Ripieno
Turkey Stuffed with Chestnuts and Prunes
This is definitely my favorite way to do turkey because it never comes out dry. My wife, Susi, is always upset when she sees me prepare this abstract-looking sausage of a gobbler, but she's happy when she eats the tender and succulent meat and stuffing, all encased in a crisp and well-seasoned skin. The advantages of this method are twofold: it's in the oven only for an hour, freeing up cooking space for other dishes; and carving is simplicity itself — just cut straight through, like a regular roast.
By Mario Batali
Fettucine with Yellow Peppers (Fettucine ai Peperoni Gialli)
By Wanda Tornabene, Giovanna Tornabene , and Michele Evans
Caponatina Toasts
Caponata is a Sicilian antipasto; its bold flavors usually include eggplant, anchovy, olives, and capers. We call our version a "caponatina," because we've finely diced the ingredients for a more refined hors d'oeuvre.
Active time: 45 min Start to finish: 1 hr
Bean and Swiss Chard Soup
Clearly this is an Italian soup. Biete is Swiss chard, usually green, although I have a fondness for the drama and beefy taste of the red-stemmed kind.
By Barbara Kafka
Fragole con Vino
By Faith Willinger
Torquato's Misunderstood Cold Pasta with Garlic Sauce
Florentine summers are hot and sticky — no time to even think about eating a plate of hot pasta. So, when Torquato Innocenti, whose produce I seek out in my local market, mentioned cold garlic pasta I raced home with his vague hints and produced the following dish.
As we compared notes the next day, I realized that Torquato's garlic sauce, and not the pasta, was cold. But no one at my table complained.
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less but requires additional unattended time.
By Faith Willinger
Garlic and Anchovy Dip with Vegetables
(BAGNA CAUDA)
The name of this warm dip of melted butter, olive oil, anchovies and garlic means "hot bath." It is usually accompanied by raw vegetables. Pour a dry white Arneis or a Gavi with this.
Caponata in Lavash Cups
Lavash, a Middle Eastern flatbread, comes in a variety of sizes and textures, from crisp rectangular crackers to large folded pliable rounds. It is the latter called for here. To form the lavash into cups, you'll need a pan with 12 mini-muffin (1/8-cup) molds, each about 1 3/4 inches across the top and 3/4 inch deep.
Caponata is a piquant Sicilian dish of eggplant, onions, tomatoes, anchovies, olives, and capers, generously laced with olive oil; this variation is much lighter-and contains no added fat-because it omits the oil, anchovies, and olives.
Pasta with Pine Nuts and Sun-Dried Tomatoes
Good as an entrée or served in smaller portions alongside chicken or beef.
By Rosemary M. Wyman
Trio of Gelati
Sicily, Italy
In Sicily, gelato usually doesn't contain any cream or eggs. The coffee and chocolate-almond flavors here are true to tradition; the zabaglione is enriched with eggs.