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12+ Works 390 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

John F. Mariani is a food and travel columnist for Esquire and a wine columnist for Bloomberg News. He has been called the most influential food-wine critic in the popular press by The Philadelphia Inquirer. He is author of The Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, The Dictionary of Italian Food show more and Drink, and, with his wife Galina, The Italian-American Cookbook. He lives in Tuckahoe, New York. Lidia Bastianich is an American chef and restaurateur. She has been a regular contributor to the PBS cooking show lineup since 1998. show less

Includes the name: John Mariani

Works by John F. Mariani

Associated Works

Best Food Writing 2002 (2002) — Contributor — 57 copies, 1 review
Best Food Writing 2012 (2012) — Contributor — 46 copies

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male

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I might have given this 2 and a half stars if it did not tick me off so much. Basically, this is not a book but a catalog of restaurants, wines, chefs (all Italian of course) that came together to raise the standard of Italian cooking in the United States and if it were not for the tantalizing tidbit here (when FedEx started shipping Europe to US in the 80's suddenly we could get fresh, good Italian staples)and there (Giada DeLaurentis posed in pool of tomato sauce {!?})and some recognition of the restaurants and chefs listed, I would have tossed it across the kitchen.… (more)
 
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PattyLee | 2 other reviews | Dec 14, 2021 |
I found this book fascinating. Maybe it is because I have a deep love of Italian food and over the past few years have read extensively on the Italian cuisine, the Italian-American cuisine and the various cuisines of the Mediterranean but I was amazed at the depth of information contained in this book. While at times I found myself scanning the pages because of the level of detail, I still continued on with it because of the numerous anecdotal and historical information about various dishes and how the food items worked its way into the global food scene. One chapter is devoted to the history of wine-making and how the Italian wine industry developed and the persons who made it happen. This book will be enjoyed by anyone who has an interest in Food History and Italian food in particular.… (more)
 
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SignoraEdie | 2 other reviews | Dec 26, 2011 |
The first half of the book garnered the three stars, with a nice history of the development of Italian cooking into world class cuisine. The latter part of the book devolves into an endless listing of famous Italian restaurants, and their chefs, that have come and gone, mostly in New York, Los Angeles and Italy. Unless you have experienced any of the restaurants, the writing fails to connect, and the discussions become dry and downright boring.
1 vote
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nemoman | 2 other reviews | May 7, 2011 |

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Works
12
Also by
2
Members
390
Popularity
#62,076
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
3
ISBNs
28
Languages
1

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