Where and what In the World

Is a blog of extraordinary destinations, food and wine,
spas, product and book reviews, travel topics, etc. etc.

Archive for the ‘Culinary Travel’ Category

La Cocina que Canta, Rancho La Puerta, Walnut and Fig Muffins

Saturday, May 19th, 2012

Dining Room at Rancho LaPuerta Photo: Maralyn D. Hill

Maralyn and I will be meeting again at Rancho La Puerta in July to present our writing workshop and take a few cooking lessons. I can hardly wait. The Ranch has so much to offer so many men and women of all ages from all over the world. Rancho La Puerta and the Golden Door have brought wellness into the lives of over 500,000 Americans in the past 72 years. The Hill team believes in making our health one of our top travel priorities.
.
During the week of our presentations we will have a choice of many mindful activities such as Herbs for the Body and Soul, Kung Fu for Fitness, Exploring the Night Sky, Love Cycles and so much more. My personal favorites are the early morning hikes, yoga, art classes, African dance, swimming, massages and cooking lessons at La Cocina que Canta. This is the  hands on “kitchen that sings” built at the edge of their organic farm. It is here that we meet many talented chefs.
.
This recipe is from the La Cocina staff led by Executive Chef, Denise Rosa.
Gluten-free Walnut and Fig Muffins
Ingredients for 12 muffins
Dry
3 cups flour mix (see recipe below)
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon baling powder
1 cup brown sugar (packed)
1 teaspoon Kosher salt
.
Wet

2 eggs
11/4 cup buttermilk
1/2 cup grape seed oil
1/2 cup fresh or dried figs, chopped

La Concina Canta - Cooking Demo Kitchen - Rancho La Puerta Photo: Maralyn D. Hill

1/2 cup walnuts, chopped
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
.

Method

Preheat oven to 350F.
In large bowl, mix all dry ingredients.
In a separate bowl, lightly beat eggs and other “wet” ingredients together. Pour wet into dry and mix with a spoon by hand until some dry flour is still evident (do not over-beat).
Use ice cream scoop to dollop muffin mixture into olive-oil-misted muffin pan (preferably one that makes small cork shaped muffins).
Bake approximately 20 minutes or until wooden pick comes out clean.
.
Gluten-Free Flour Mixture
Ranch La Puerta uses all Bob Mill’s ingredients which are commonly available in health food grocery stores. For precision, this mixture is by weight: Combine equal parts of corn, quin and sweet brown rice flours until weight is 700 grams. Combine equal parts potato starch and tapioca flour until weight is 300 grams. Mix all together. store excess in air tight container to use soon for any baked-goods recipe. Experiment with amounts to accentuate certain flavors you might like best.
.
Look for more recipes from the teaching kitchen and garden this summer. Or find them by contacting www.rancholapuerta.com. Phone 877-440-7772.
Rancho La Puerta is a short, easy, and beautiful drive from San Diego in the charming village of Tecate, Mexico, Baja California, P.O. Box 69, Tecate, California 91980.

A Cooking Class in Puglia

Wednesday, April 4th, 2012

Puglia Pasta

Spring and Summer are wonderful times to visit Puglia, the new popular destination in international tourism in the south of Italy. This region is characterised to a large extent of Baroque architecture, centenarian olive groves, a myriad of nice little villages (where it is possible to experience the local traditions and culture), a beautiful coastline going from the Adriatic to the Ionian sea, magical atmosphere and warm local people.

.
Puglia offers an incredible variety of food and wine. This is the southern region of the “cucina povera” (peasant cooking), based on natural, genuine ingredients, like vegetables, legumes and lot of seafood, olive oil, homemade pasta and bread . Its superb food and wine, make Puglia perfect place for a culinary and wine vacation.

.
Vegetables in this area are the basis of any meal. Row or cooked, they are always considered an important part of the meal and in some cases wild vegetables are used to make simple and tasty recipes of the rural tradition like wild chicory, spices and cheese.

.

Kneading pasta

A cooking class in this area is a once of a lifetime experience. There’s a group of fun and lovely Moms called “Mamme in Cucina” (Mums in the Kitchen) where guests have the opportunity of spending their culinary day with a local mum in her kitchen and have lunch based on their creations with the rest of the family and friends.

.
A special day to spend with locals like a local, during which guests perfectly mingle with local people and their habits.
A cappuccino and cornetto to well start the day in some popular bar (for the locals), a visit to a food market, some casual tastings along the way, the preparation of the meal hands-on and tons of fun pictures during the lesson.

.
All of our Moms are simply wonderful: lovely and excellent teachers when it is about cooking. These lovely mums are all native from Puglia, they are not chef, but Mamme who have been cooking traditional recipes lifelong, maintaining intact the traditional cooking as it was once and who know anything about freshest seasonal products, traditional recipes and food markets. They personally know every vendor they shop from and can tell you many interesting stories on ingredients combined in an almost magic way.

Pulgia Dishes

.
They are the typical local mum, simple and genuine. The day you spend with them is one of a kind: relaxing, instructive (because they will teach you how to cook the traditional way) and fun. Classes are conducted in a casual and very familiar way, just like being home with friends.
Guests are given a nice “gift bag” with an apron – to take home – recipes, little gifts and foodie delicacies.

.
So if you want to celebrate the extraordinary beauty of Puglia “cucina contadina”, keeping food and simplicity at the centre of family and friends life, eating with a local family, sharing the joy of food and of the “casa”, then Puglia will be a real wish-fulfillement destination for you.
Cooking with a local Mum is the best way to experience this authenticity: watch her rolling pasta, make focaccia and bread and chat in a fun Italian language.

.
To reserve your special cooking class with a MAMMA, please email to: info@yltourcongressi.com
YLTOUR offers cooking lessons, winery tours, gourmet tours, harvest experience, excursions to artisan food and wine producers and of course, very popular cooking vacation programs in Puglia that include accommodations and excursions to remote villages.

.

Ylenia Sambati

Ylenia Sambati is a Puglia Travel Expert who can assist you in planning a trip to the region. She organizes unique trips to Puglia and provide lovely accommodations. Packages from one day, to weekends and weekly programs.
www.yltourcongressi.com

Ylenia was born and raised in Puglia (she attended University in France) and has extensively experience in tourism and event planning, promoting events and cultural initiatives in Italy and abroad focused on Puglia.

Besides her interest in tourism, Ylenia has also organized several events around the world promoting Puglia culture and lifestyle through the promotion of cultural and educational exchanges by planning events and tours which enhance the familiarity between Puglia and the rest of the world.

She very well knows the area and local culture and loves writing and informing the public about this beautiful southern Italian area and all the interesting things it has to offer.

She represents an outstanding point of reference for passionate of Puglia cuisine and lifestyle: foodie/gourmets, travel agents, importers, cooking schools, tour operators, sommeliers, students, media people, chefs and restaurateurs, writers, bloggers, editors, travel consultants, promotional organizations of food, wine and tourism, people loving southern italian culture around the world.

She specialize in customized Puglia travel and events planning and offer unforgettable experiences for leisure, incentive and business travel, with programs where culture and the traditions of southern Italy can be truly experienced and enjoyed and assists foreign companies in reaching Puglia trading partners.

She can tailor a wide range of inspirational events and tours: enjoy the most authentic Puglia and do something beautiful: cook, yoga, food and wine tour, paint, sport, meet the locals. Don’t miss her hands-on cooking classes in creative cuisines and wine appreciation in authentic Puglia retreats. She  also help you buy, restore and rent out rural, town and prestige properties in the Salento (Puglia) area.

She speaks Italian, English, French.

Email: info@yltourcongressi.comwww.yltourcongressi.com

Cooking Vacations and Recipes, Formaggio Con Le Pere, Chicken Cacciatore, Tuscan Biscotti, and more

Sunday, December 4th, 2011

This is a newsletter from Cooking Vacations. I would encourage you to sign up on their website.

Mangiare Bene

Fresh Recipes, New Kitchen Ideas, Food News & Fun Things To Do In Sunny Italy

Today is 27C in Positano that’s just about 79F. Visitors are on the beach and bathing in the sea and there was even an unexpected boat that sailed in from Amalfi. This is the unforeseen beauty of the Amalfi Coast in November. The seasons go on maybe a little warmer than usual; and so do the food and wine.

November in Italy is also deep dark green olio nuovo drizzled on a Carpaccio Morellino Tagliatelle e Tartufi Bianca white truffles melting on a bed of warm pasta with Cantucci dipped in Vin Santo. There’s also Vino Novello the new wine to sip about and Formaggie Stagionale made with precious truffles or walnuts. Great pairings for a cozy night before the fire.

And while the Lattari Mountains to the Tuscan hills swirl in colors of emerald green and dark deep burgundy the vineyards lay bare with yellow leaves covering vines that will sleep until spring. Crack another castagne take another sip of Vino Nobile and soak in the warm Autumn sun. Italy beckons the soul in November.

Buon Appetito!

Lauren

Table Talk

Congrats to our favorite Chef Todd English!

November also brings us award-winning Chef Todd English’s “Everyday English: The AB Cs Of Great Flavor At Home. English an award-winning TV chef and well-known restaurateur brings us 150 recipes from his kitchen. In our Kitchen we are cooking up hearty comfort food recipes like zucca and pasta Todd English’s chicken ciaccatore and Panza Mela baked apples. Check out our new cooking program Bologna ~ Tortellini Parmigiano & Balsamico™ La Grande Cucina With Chef Antonella~ 5 Day La Grande Cucina Bologna program includes 3 hands-on cooking classes while discovering so many favorite addresses of food wine culture and history in la centro storico. Read more at http://cooking-vacations.com/tour/la-grande-cucina-with-chef-antonella-5-day/

There’s something about November – the cold wind whipping through your hair perhaps or the exhilaration of a brisk country walk – that has you rubbing your hands in glee and heading for the kitchen. Gone are the fresh tomato salads and light lunches of summer and here come slow-simmered soups and stews that infuse the house with their delicious reassuring smells. After months spent outside the house becomes a home again with the kitchen at the center of activities the warmth and scents of home cooking luring family and friends oven-wards. The clocks have been turned back evening comes early and we settle into the comforting ritual of the changing of seasons celebrating the arrival of all November’s goodies: pumpkins and squash mushrooms broccoli kale and the first of the year’s root vegetables – swede carrots turnips and beetroots – that are so good cut into chunks and roasted as a simple accompaniment to chicken or beef. Simple fair but delicious.

November is also the perfect month to make the best of Southern Italy’s clement weather with a cooking vacation on the Amalfi Coast Puglia or the island of Sicily. Perhaps with Chef Raffaele in the hilltown of Ravello with its historic villas and gorgeous views over the coast or in Puglia with Chef Letizia’s Slow Food program where you will cook eat and tour your way through this amazing region of trulli. Or hone your skills under the eagle eye of a Michelin star chef and his team on our Sicilian Cookbook program in Modica where dishes from the kitchen are true works of art. That’s the beauty of Italy its diversity: while folks are busy on the Northern ski slopes there is a beach in a southern town with locals soaking up the sun. The choice of destinations is truly mesmerizing. And as ever even if you can’t make it to Italy take a sip of a good Italian wine close your eyes and you’ll be with us in spirit if not in body!

Food Notes

Before coming to Italy the only broccoli many people will have encountered is the common dark green broccoli with its compact florets that is on sale in most vegetable markets and supermarkets. But in Italy especially in the south there are more types of broccoli than you can shake a stick at. Regular broccoli is easy to find too but more often than not you’ll run into broccoli di Natale broccoli rabe broccoletti and Romanesco (looks like a pointy cauliflower). All of these varieties are equally delicious and are endlessly versatile.

In the Cooking Vacations kitchen there is garden bitter broccoli rabe or friarielli as they’re known here we’ll have greens from November to February helping to keep the weeds at bay. In the greenhouse we planted another three types of broccoli which will be used with pasta Puglia style; blanched then sautéed in oil and garlic; used as a stuffing for pizze rustiche; served up with delicious Italian sausages; as a pizza topping with crumbled sausage meat. You can also put them in a golden frittatte conserve them under oil or purée them to provide a ‘bed’ for meat or even an elegant serving of pasta. And of course the great thing is that friarielli and broccoli are inexpensive (if not free with so many kind neighbors growing and giving them away) and are incredibly good for you. In fact broccoli rabe has recently been named a power food thanks to its cancer-fighting sulforophanes and indoles and its powerful antioxidant properties. We are cooking up a storm and getting healthy with broccoli!

Recipes From Our Kitchen

Formaggio Con Le Pere

This simple and easy Autumn recipe is great appetizer.

Number of servings (yield): 2

Ingredients

  • 1 whole Spadona Pear
  • 1 of lettuce
  • 1 handful of shaved Percorino cheese
  • 1 small hand of walnuts
  • Modena Balsamico drizzle to taste
  • Sea Salt
  • Extra Virgin First Cold Pressed Olive Oil

Instructions

  • Wash the lettuce well.
  • Rip into small pieces.
  • Peal the pear take the stem out and cut into small pieces.
  • Add the Balsamico add the oil sprinkle with sea salt add the Pecorino.
  • Toss let sit for 10 minutes and serve.

Todd English’s
“Old School” Chicken Cacciatore

Number of servings (yield): 4 – 6

Ingredients

  • Skinned bone-in chicken thighs 8 (about 4 lb.)
  • Kosher salt 1 tsp.
  • Freshly ground black pepper 1 tsp.
  • All-purpose flour 1 cup
  • Olive oil 1⁄4 cup divided
  • Shiitake mushrooms 3 cups sliced
  • Shallots 1⁄2 cup finely chopped
  • Anchovies 2 coarsely chopped
  • Garlic 3 cloves minced
  • Capers 3 Tbsp. drained
  • Dry red wine 2 cups
  • Balsamic vinegar 1⁄3 cup
  • Fresh sage leaves 4
  • Bay leaf 1
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
  • Semolina Polenta (page 122)
  • Fresh flat-leaf parsley 1⁄2 cup coarsely chopped

Instructions

  • Sprinkle chicken with salt and pepper. Dredge in flour shaking off excess.
  • Cook chicken in batches in 2 Tbsp. hot oil in a large Dutch oven over medium-high heat 3 to 5 minutes on each side or until browned. Transfer to a plate and wipe Dutch oven clean.
  • Add remaining 2 Tbsp. oil to Dutch oven and heat over medium heat. Add mushrooms and next 4 ingredients and cook stirring occasionally 5 minutes or until mushrooms are soft. Return chicken to Dutch oven and add wine and next 3 ingredients.
  • Bring to a simmer. Cover reduce heat to low and cook 11⁄2 hours or until meat is tender enough to fall off the bone basting chicken occasionally with liquid in Dutch oven. Remove and discard bay leaf. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Serve over Semolina Polenta; sprinkle with parsley just before serving.

Cantucci~ Tuscan Biscotti

Number of servings (yield): 8

Ingredients

  • 3 Eggs
  • 3 Egg Yolks
  • 1 1/3 cups Sugar
  • 2 ¾ cups Flour (plus additional flour if needed if too sticky)
  • Salt to taste
  • ½ glass Milk
  • 2 tsp Baking Powder
  • 1 ½ cups Almonds to taste
  • A glass of Vin Santo for dipping.

Instructions

  • In a large mixing bowl whip 2 eggs with the 3 egg yolks and the sugar until foamy.
  • Add the flour little by little mixing continuously the salt milk and baking powder.
  • Mix well then add the almonds; try to mix them in evenly throughout.
  • It will be a pretty soft and sticky dough but add additional flour if too soft.
  • Line a baking pan with parchment paper and form flattened logs of dough about 1 ½ inches wide and ½ inch tall (length depending on your baking pan).
  • Brush each log with the remaining egg.
  • Bake in a preheated oven at 300 degrees F for about 30 minutes until the logs are browned.
  • Remove from the oven and allow to cool for 3-5 minutes.
  • Slice diagonally into biscotti shapes and place on the baking pan.
  • Lower the temperature of the open to 250 degrees F and bake a second time for 10 minutes to toast the biscotti until the inside is golden.

Italian Feasts and Celebrations

November is a month rich in sagras or Italian food festivals. This is the season of wine nuts truffles and oil and here we share with you a selection of Italy’s favorites.

La Sagra delle Sagre: Sant’Agnelo dei Lombardi (AV)

Campania 12th & 13th November. The aim of this well known sagra held in the Province of Avellino is to showcase the area’s very best products ingredients wines artisans and celebrate traditional culture. Sample a variety of traditional dishes enjoy the area’s excellent wines and participate in local folk dancing exhibitions. Children are well catered for with organized games street artists and musicians. And of course what better occasion to pick up some of the area’s delicious pecorino cheese truffles honey cookies country-style bread salumi and hams?

Saffron Festival Gavino Monreale Sardegna

The town of Gavino Monreale in Sardinia is where this festival takes place from 11th – 13th November to celebrate the area’s precious saffron. Sardinia’s saffron is a unique product treasured for its high quality its color flavor and aroma. Brought to the island by the Phoenicians and enjoyed by the Romans and Byzantines this ‘oro rosso’ has become one of Sardinia’s best loved specialties one you’ll be able to try in a variety of dishes at this sagra along with samples of other local gastronomic specialties.

Festa dei Bringoli e di San Martino Anghiari

This traditional celebration takes place in the province of Arezzo on 12th-13th November with the local handmade pasta similar to fat rolled spaghetti bringoli at the centre of attention. Huge quantities of sausages bringoli with meat and mushrooms chestnuts and vino novello are served up to the town’s many visitors and festivities normally continue into the wee small hours.

Fossa Tartufo e Cerere Mondaiono Emilia Romagna

The town of Mondaino near Rimini holds this most delicious of festivals from the 20th – 27th of November where guests can sample the unique combination of the area’s white truffles and special formaggio di fossa sheeps’ milk cheese matured in specially prepared pits. Attend meetings and discussions on both local truffles and cheeses take in a demonstration or two and enjoy some musical entertainment. A wonderful opportunity to taste two of this region’s most prized products with many local restaurants offering special menus for the duration of the sagra.

With Love from Italy

If you cannot make it to Italy we bring Italy to you~

Opt For An Opera

November signals the opening of the official opera season for many of Italy’s great opera houses with Rossini’s Semiramide marking the opening at the San Carlo in Naples Rossini’s La Dona del Lago newly opened at La Scala in Milan and Verdi’s Il Trovatore opening soon at La Fenice in Venice. So why not treat yourself to a night to remember at one of Italy’s historic opera houses – an experience you’ll never forget.

www.teatrosancarlo.it

Da Vinci at Fiumicino

It’s hoped that visitors to Italy flying through Rome’s Fiumicino Airport don’t have to spend too much time there but anyone with a spare hour or so on their hands can head along to the Leonardo Da Vinci exhibition the airport is hosting through April 2012. Appropriately all 21 full-size flight machines and aeronautical instruments made of wood metal and cloth derived from Leonardo’s original sketches and drawings will be on show including the 12 meter high machine called “Vertical Ornithopter” which represents the Leonardesque precursor of the modern helicopter.

www.adr.it

Venice & Egypt

Until January next year visitors to the Palazzo Ducale in Venice can take in this fascinating exhibition uncovering the theme of the relationship and the ties between Venice and Egypt across almost two millennia. Over 300 international pieces have been brought together to illustrate shared history adventures science and business human interest stories and great art. Sounds like a winner to us.

www.visitmuve.it/it/2011/09/1774/venezia-egitto/

150 Years of Italian Fashion

Turin’s Venaria Reale is hosting this interesting exhibition on Italian fashion from the Unification of Italy in 1861 to the present day with two experts costume designer and 1994 Academy Award Winner Gabriella Pescucci and fashion journalist Franca Sozzani (editor-in-chief of Vogue Italia since 1988) bringing together what they consider to be the most significant themes and styles of this 150-year period of the Italian fashion scene.

www.lavenaria.it/mostre/eng/eventi/2011/high_fashion.shtml

Italy On A Plate

By Germaine Stafford

Germaine continues her roundup of what’s happening in the culinary world in Italy and gives you her chef of the month book recommendation and a list of seasonal foods for November.

What’s in Season?

  • Duck
  • Goose
  • Garlic
  • Mushrooms
  • Parsnips
  • Swede
  • Cabbage
  • Turnip
  • Leeks
  • Onion
  • Carrots
  • Kale
  • Beetroot
  • Celeriac
  • Pumpkin
  • Cranberries
  • Apples
  • Pears
  • Quinces
  • Chestnuts
  • Hazelnuts
  • Walnuts

Restaurant Of The Month

Malga Panna Moena Trentino

As is our wont November has us dreaming of snow capped mountains terse blue skies and somewhere to cozy up and enjoy a wonderful meal. Up in the Dolomites in the town of Moena on the slope of the mountainside overlooking the town you’ll find a fairytale chalet that is home to this month’s eatery Malga Panna. As you approach it you’ll feel as if you’ve been whisked away to another world (which you have!): hand-carved wooden shutters and balconies geraniums and petunias trailing from window boxes; the pine forest capping the ridges above. And when you step indoors you’ll be utterly charmed by the warmth of the interior. In cold weather you’ll love the logs crackling away in the fireplace and it’s difficult not to fall for the characteristic carved wooden tables and chairs or the ancient cartwheel separating two rooms.

Three generations of the Donei family have gradually transformed what was a simple mountain shelter for animals into one of the area’s most important eateries and now it’s award-winning Chef Paolo Donei who runs the kitchen. Expect a warm welcome from Massimo Donei and prepare to be entertained.

Memory is at the basis of chef Paolo’s philosophy as he believes it is by making note of sensations and ideas that you create memories and that it’s memory that stimulates the imagination. ‘It has never been our intention to invent or stupefy’ he says ‘but rather to tell and remember old stories using new concepts and ideas.’ And these ideas are reflected in the traditional yet innovative dishes that come out of his kitchen.

Depending on the season for an appetiser you might opt for pumpkin pie with truffle and crunchy rye bread; roast prawn tails cuttlefish in olive oil and burrata cheese (divine); venison tartare with smoked aubergines golden apple and rustic bread; or local snails Bourguignonne style. First dishes come in the form of papparedelle with venison and smoked bacon; wild celery soup with ‘cappelletti’ of beetroot and a millefeuille of fresh goat’s cheese; or perhaps tagliolini with porcini; or even tortelli with eggplant roast prawn tails and bisque sauce. And main dishes leave you in no doubt that you’re up in the Dolomites: roe deer venison stew with polenta; baked leg of spring lamb with thyme creamy potatoes and crunchy pumpkin; roast fillet of deer venison grilled polenta mountain honey and wine sauce; or a delicious selection of best cheeses from the Alps with jam and warm bread. As you’d expect desserts are designed to make you eat even when you think you’re full so chose between caramelized cream puffs with dried fruit parfait and pear Chantilly; chocolate liquorice and citrus fruits; wild berry sorbet with candied strawberries and maple syrup cream; or (our favorite) white chocolate passion fruit peach and basil.

Accompany your meal with any of the restaurant’s comprehensive wine list (prices are admirably honest and there are plenty of choices by the glass as well as bottles) and as you sit back with a final glass like many fellow guests you’ll be reluctant to leave and return to ‘real life’.

Ristorante Malga Panna

Strada de Sort 64

Moena (TN)

Tel: +39 0462 574142

Web: www.malgapanna.it

Book Of The Month

Cooking in Everyday English: The ABCs of Great Flavor at Home Oxmoore House.

We’re always excited when friends of Cooking Vacations have a new book on the scene and this fabulous volume by Todd English is no exception. True it’s not exclusively an Italian cook book but Todd’s Italian roots means there are lots of healthful Mediterranean-style dishes on the menu that are easy to prepare and which will appeal to all the family.

English an award-winning TV chef and well-known restaurateur explains how to transform everyday ingredients into simple but delicious dishes at home with special emphasis on how to create winning flavor combinations. Cooking in Everyday English uses a clear uncomplicated approach to walk readers through recipes step-by-step explaining how to get the best out of fresh seasonal ingredients and showcase their unique characteristics using a variety of simple techniques. From appetizers soups and salads to meat and fish family dinners and desserts dishes are illustrated with gorgeous photographs making it not only a comprehensive cookbook but a visual delight.

English shows us how simple ideas can nevertheless result in flavorsome food – Gorgonzola bruschetta for example fire-roasted eggplant herbed ricotta crostini or an easy pesto and shrimp frittata. Or how about mozzarella stuffed meatballs with roasted tomatoes orange and fennel salad beet risotto with blue cheese or fava bean minestrone? English also explains the secret to making homemade pizza dough (salami and caramelized onion pizza anyone?) and also homeamde pasta with artichoke cheese and pepper pasta and sweetcorn ravioli just two of the pasta dishes on offer. Desserts also sound tempting with spiced apple compote olive oil pound cake panna cotta with crushed blackberries and Todd’s favorite cookies just a few of the sweet treats included.

All in all this latest offering from Todd English will make a great kitchen companion guiding new cooks through each dish with ease and providing innovative ideas for flavor combinations for the more experienced cook. An all round winner.


USA: 20 Park Plaza, #400, Boston, MA 02116, USA | T: 617.247.4112 | F: 617.247.4850
ITALY: Via G. Marconi, 177-84017, Positano, Italy • T: 39.339.604.29.33

I hope you enjoyed this and sign up for your newsletter from Cooking Vacations.















Logo 120x60 CheapOair



Wine of the month club