Sicilian Food: Recipes from Italy's Abundant Isle by Mary Taylor Simeti
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Fava bean soup (Maccu) (page 16)
from Sicilian Food: Recipes from Italy's Abundant Isle Sicilian Food by Mary Taylor Simeti
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- ISBN 10 1902304179
- ISBN 13 9781902304175
- Linked ISBNs
- 9780712645508 Hardcover (United Kingdom) 4/11/1991
- 9780880016100 Hardcover (United States) 2/15/2019
- 9781862548503 Paperback (Australia) 7/13/2009
- 9780394568508 Hardcover (United States) 9/9/1989
- 9780805016017 Paperback 4/1/1991
- 9781908117915 eBook (United Kingdom) 5/24/2010
- 9781635618518 Hardcover (United Kingdom) 2/15/2019
- Published Jul 01 2009
- Format Paperback
- Page Count 352
- Language English
- Edition New edition
- Countries United Kingdom
- Publisher Grub Street
- Imprint Grub Street
Publishers Text
Pomp and Sustenance: Twenty Five Centuries of Sicilian Food--back in print! If there is one book that belongs on the shelf of food lovers, it is Sicilian Food by Mary Taylor Simeti. This book is a classic, the definitive work on Sicilian cooking and it is full of authentic, hard to find recipes gleaned from the author's friends, family and acquaintances on the island itself. Originally published in 1989 under the title Pomp and Sustenance: Twenty Five Centuries of Sicilian Food and then unavailable for almost ten years, Mary Taylor Simeti’s affectionate, exhaustive work has come to be recognized as the definitive book on the food, traditions and recipes of this sun-drenched island.
The author, an American married to a Sicilian, set out to discover Sicilian food first hand. She haunted former convents and palaces where Palermo's libraries have been maintained. She tested each ancient recipe herself and updated the methods. Her directions are clear and easy to follow. The book is organized so that the material reflects both the external influences of a series of conquerors, and the domestic changes brought about by peasant, clergy and aristocrat alike. Her chapter titles hint at the enticing discoveries waiting for the reader and the recipes reflect the chapter titles.
There are recipes using the vegetable abundance of the Sicilian landscape, for ice cream or granita, and, yes there are recipes for Virgins Breasts and Chancellor's Buttocks. The book contains more than a hundred illustrations from Sicilian archives and museums and the text quotes freely from Homer, Plato, Apicius, Lampedusa, and Pirandello. Simeti's prose is so descriptive that to read it is to be in Sicily.
Other cookbooks by this author
- Bitter Almonds: Recollections & Recipes from a Sicilian Girlhood
- Pomp and Sustenance: Twenty-five Centuries of Sicilian Food
- Pomp and Sustenance: Twenty-Five Centuries of Sicilian Food
- Pomp and Sustenance - Sicilian Food: Twenty-Five Centuries of Sicilian Food
- Pomp And Sustenance - Sicilian Food: Twenty-five Centuries of Sicilian Food
- Sicilian Food
- Sicilian Food: Recipes from Italy's Abundant Isle
- Sicilian Food
- Sicilian Summer: An Adventure in Cooking with My Grandsons

