Sunday, July 30, 2023

Review of Italy On A Plate



"In her debut cookbook, Susan Gravely celebrates 40 years as Founder and Creative Director of VIETRI, a lifestyle brand offering handcrafted Italian tabletop and home and garden accessories." 

So begins the description of this beautiful cookbook, Italy On A Plate,  that I won as a giveaway from my favorite website The Book Club Cookbook



Information from the VIETRI website

"When Susan, Frances, and their mother, Lee Gravely, took their first trip to Italy in 1983, they fell in love with the Italian culture. During their stay at the San Pietro Hotel in Positano, they went to lunch and found themselves captivated by the hotel's colorful, handcrafted dinnerware. The next day they arranged to meet the artisans at a nearby factory in the town of Vietri sul Mare. As they watched the artisans paint, glaze, and fire each piece by hand, they were inspired to share the treasure they had discovered. The Gravelys returned home with an array of pieces with mixed patterns all related to nature. The collection would become known as Campagna, VIETRI's flagship dinnerware."

Italy On A Plate is a compilation of Susan Gravely's memories and recipes that she collected in her travels in the various regions of Italy to add to her line of fine dining ceramics and resulting friendships. I love a cookbook such as this that not only is comprised of delicious recipes but also stories of the people behind them.  The photography inside is exquisite, with each completed recipe presented on a piece of her company's dinnerware.

 


There are many recipes I'd like to try but this recipe for "Zucchine Al Gorgonzola--Zucchini With Gorgonzola" on page 38 caught my eye and was the first recipe I made.  Comprised of zucchini, eggs, sour cream, gorgonzola cheese, and spices, this is cooked up with a souffle-like top with a buttery sliced zucchini bottom.  It was delicious and made such a pretty presentation.




I paired the dish with roasted trout and salmon, as well as steamed asparagus and broccoli. The addition of Zucchine Al Gorgonzola provided a luxurious touch to the meal. My son-in-law was so pleased with the dish that he asked if he could take the remaining food home.




The second recipe I tried was "Involtini Di Melanzane--Eggplant Rolls," on page 156.

This is Susan's favorite dish!



I have made Eggplant Rollatini many times in the past--you can see my recipe that I blogged about a long time ago when I lived in Brooklyn, New York, on this linkIf you peek at that post you can see that I used to dip the eggplant slice in egg, then bread crumbs, and then fry them before stuffing them with a ricotta cheese mixture and then baking them.  Susan's recipe was lighter with no breading--the eggplant slices were brushed with olive oil and baked to soften them, and included a slice of prosciutto placed on the inside of each slice before stuffing them and rolling them up. Susan served hers with a hint of sauce on top,  but we like them smothered in sauce with mozzarella cheese on them. We did not miss the breading at all and the prosciutto gave the eggplant rolls an extra layer of flavor.  I'll never make them any other way from now on.

I've saved a lot of recipes that I'm excited to test out, ranging from soups and appetizers to main courses and desserts. 

Italy On A Plate is truly lovely and I plan on always cherishing it as part of my collection.

Thank you to The Book Club Cookbook for such a wonderful giveaway prize!


18 comments:

Crafty Green Poet said...

That looks like a great book! I love italian food!

Ciao Chow Linda said...

I am really interested to read this book after reading your glowing review. One of the book clubs I belong to prepares a dinner in keeping with the book’s theme, so this would be great for us.

Rambling Woods said...

Congratulations...I don't think I have ever one anything...Michelle

Lydia C. Lee said...

Yummo #BlueMonday

Jeanie said...

Does anyone eat better than those who dine at your home? I think not! That looks like a terrific cookbook and your finished creations look even better than that! Thanks for the terrific review~!

stevebethere said...

LOOKS interesting the food looks delicious thanks for sharing :-)

Have an eggplanttastic week 👍

eileeninmd said...

Hello,
Congrats on winning the cookbook. I love Italian food and this cookbook sounds great. Take care, have a great day and happy week ahead!

mvmaithai said...

I love stories like that. The zucchini Al Gorgonzola sounds wonderful!

William Kendall said...

Italian cuisine- who can pass on that?

Slabs said...

Amazing, love the zucchini dish it does look amazing.
I visited you via Tuesdays with a Twist #536!
I linked up this week with = 27-28.
If you have not joined us as yet at SSPS do come and share your awesome post/s with us
You will find the linkup information under BLOGGING: https: // esmesalon . com / tag / seniorsalonpitstop (no spaces) We hope to meet you there virtually.

Veronica Lee said...

Oooo! I love Italian food!

Congrats on winning the cookbook.

EricaSta said...

We love italian food, because... there are many reasons. All looks very delicious.


Thank you for sharing and being part at
MosaicMonday.

Have a wonderful week.
Greetings by Heidrun

Lillian "sognafaret" said...

You realy made me hungry

Joanne said...

Oh this does sound like a delicious cook book; that zucchini dish sounds wonderful and I love anything with eggplant.

Estelle Forrest said...

I love that you made a few recipes from the cookbook as part of your review. Thanks for sharing at SSPS, hope to see you again next week.

fredamans said...

Got me hungry!!

Food nutters said...

This seems to be an interesting book. Yesterday I was making pizza with porcini and I could use some ideas, but eventually, it worked out perfectly. Btw, I love zucchini with gorgonzola!

Sallie (FullTime-Life) said...

You were the perfect person to win that beautiful book. I have loved all the posts you have shared about Italian cooking. Both the zuchinni and eggplant dishes scrumptious. We have a few eggplant recipes on semi-regular rotation and have talked about how in 'the olden days" people used to worry about the bitterness -- soak the slices or salt them heavily and let them drain is what I seem to remember. Not necessary at all today.