Cooking by Hand
One of the most respected chefs in the country, Paul Bertolli earns
glowing praise for the food at California’s renowned Oliveto
restaurant. Now he shares his most personal thoughts about cooking
in his long-awaited book, Cooking by Hand. In this groundbreaking
collection of essays and recipes, Bertolli evocatively explores
the philosophy behind the food that Molly O’Neill of the New
York Times described as “deceptively simple, [with] favors
clean, deep, and layered more profusely than a mille-feuille.”
From “Twelve Ways of Looking at Tomatoes” to Italian
salumi in “The Whole Hog,” Bertolli explores his favorite
foods with the vividness of a natural writer and the instincts of
a superlative chef. Scattered throughout are more than 140 recipes
remarkable for their clarity, simplicity, and seductive appeal,
from Salad of Bitter Greens, Walnuts, Tesa, and Parmigiano and Chilled
Shellfish with Salsa Verde to Short Ribs Agrodolce and Tagliolini
Pasta with Crab. Unforgettable desserts, such as Semifreddo of Peaches
and Mascarpone and Hazelnut Meringata with Chocolate and Espresso
Sauce, round out a collection that’s destined to become required
reading for any food lover.
Rich with the remarkable food memories that inspire him, from the
taste of ripe Santa Rosa plums and the aroma of dried porcini mushrooms
in his mother’s ragu to eating grilled bistecca alla Fiorentina
on a foggy late autumn day in Chianti, Cooking by Hand will ignite
a passion within you to become more creatively involved in the food
you cook.
PAUL BERTOLLI is executive chef and co-owner of Oliveto restaurant
in Oakland, California. He has received numerous accolades, most
recently the award for “Best Chef: California” from
the James Beard Foundation in 2001. He is also known for his tenure
as chef of Chez Panisse restaurant, where for ten years he guided
the restaurant’s cooking toward Italian sensibilities. Active
as a chef, writer, and artisan food producer, Bertolli tends to
his garden, bread oven, salumi cellar, vinegar loft, pickle vats,
distillations, wine, and other mysterious fermentations from his
home base in North Berkeley, California. |