One of the most coveted reservations to have in New York City is at Babbo, Mario Batali's flagship restaurant in Greenwich Village. In
The Babbo Cookbook, Batali (author of
Mario Batali Simple Italian Food and
Mario Batali Holiday Food) takes readers behind the scenes of his popular restaurant--from the kitchen to the front of house--sharing 150 recipes for his innovative Italian fare and offering tips on menu selection, service, and presentation. Along the way, Batali expertly captures the intimate buzz, the warm hospitality, and the generous attention to detail that makes Babbo a singular dining experience.
Before digging into any of the dozen-plus featured antipasti, Batali offers several specialty aperitivi, including the refreshing Blood Orange Bellini. Two of Babbo's signature dishes, Mint Love Letters with Spicy Lamb Sausage (little ravioli stuffed with a filling of sweet peas, mint, heavy cream, and Parmigiano-Reggiano) and Beef Cheek Ravioli (so good the book recommends doubling the filling and freezing a batch), are broken down and made more than accessible to the home cook. Other exceptional pasta options include Pumpkin Lune with Butter and Sage (finished with a dusting of Parmigiano-Reggiano and amaretti cookie crumbs) and Gnocchi with Oxtail Ragù (a reinterpretation of a Batali family classic, still served at Salumi, his father's must-visit Seattle shop). Chapters "Mare (From the Sea)" and "Terra e Bosco (From the Earth and Forest)" offer Crispy Black Bass with Endive Marmellata and Saffron Vinaigrette ("'crispy' sells more food than a barrage of adjectives," Batali reveals) and a succulent Osso Buco with Toasted Pine Nut Gremolata. There's a wonderful section on pre-desserts and cheese, and in "Dolci" pastry chef Gina DePalma wraps things up with Maple and Mascarpone Cheesecake, Meyer Lemon Semifreddo, and a tempting cookie plate.
The Babbo Cookbook is a gorgeous affair--nearly every recipe is accompanied by a color photo of the finished dish. Batali is an intelligent and inspiring guide throughout the book, and Babbo co-owner Joseph Bastianich (who cowrote the terrific Vino Italiano with Babbo wine director David Lynch) provides detailed notes on their topnotch table and wine service. Some of the recipes may seem daunting to tentative home cooks (the recipe for Warm Testa with Waxy Potatoes opens with "Place the pig's head in a large pot with water"), but Batali recognizes that readers don't have the benefit of being backed by a kitchen staff and offers tips and modifications to turn out a version of the dish as close as possible to the real deal. Whether you choose to cook your way through one recipe at a time or attempt to turn out an entire tasting menu for a special occasion, Batali's Babbo Cookbook is a keeper--a book you'll turn to again and again. --Brad Thomas Parsons
There was a time when a restaurant meal meant rare delights that we ate when we went out for special splurges, while a home meal was based on recipes of normal things we could easily shop for and prepare in our humble, normal kitchens. High-end restaurant food is created from top ingredients (to which only professionals have ready access) in well-staffed, fully-equipped kitchens, whose sole purpose is to astound clients and render them willing to charge big tickets on their credit cards.
In those old days, a recipe book featuring restaurant-cooking was usually a vanity publication by the restaurant in question, a publicity gimmick, often a giveaway to good clients, and useful mostly as a memento of a great meal in that restaurant. No one would seriously consider attempting recipes from such books, leaving them pristine and unstained the better to adorn the coffee-table (exceptions, such as Alice Waterss epoch-making efforts, notwithstanding).
Now, in a dizzyingly competitive cookbook market, famous chef and/or restaurant cookbooks are the norm, even though the recipes within are just as impossible to properly render at home as ever. This is particularly true for super-chefs crowned celebrities by television, and even more so for multi-tasking chefs who commandeer TV shows alongside well-regarded restaurants.
Such a one is Mario Batali, star of two Food Network shows, wine merchant, author of two previous cookbooks, and owner of three New York City restaurants. The Babbo Cookbook, a very handsome item and his newest offering, is named for one of those restaurants and recounts fare that is fiercely and joyously Italian.
Reading through it is like a virtual meal at the chefs honour-table, from reinvented pre-dinner cocktails all the way to pre-desserts and desserts, complete with mouth-watering photographs, little anecdotes, and fully articulated, labour-intensive recipes, that are chock-full of devilishly recherché ingredients.
Take for example cardoon, a leaves-plus-root relative of the artichoke. Chef Batali asks for it on no less than four occasions, and talks about it as if it were broccoli or green beans. I am a foodie, and yet I have never heard of or seen a cardoon. Well, trust me, now that Ive read this book, I shall be on the lookout, and if I ever find it I shall make damn sure that it becomes my favourite too.
Cardoon, however, is the least of the chefs culinary challenges. One can, after all, replace it with Jerusalem artichoke, or even crass, regular artichoke. But what do we do with recipes that depend on non-sequiturs like chestnut honey, baby eels, jellyfish, quince vinegar, or blood orange concentrate? Do we pay huge money and order them from the chef's list of New York sources?
Personally, Id ignore those recipes, and concentrate instead on many other recipes that are easier to shop for and to cook if one has the time. And Id use this book for its true strengths. It deals with home-made pasta in several easy-sounding versions, especially in the realm of raviolis. It gives good hints on wine and its proper service, and has excellent side-bar recipes for flavoured oils, essential sauces, and a wide variety of biscotti (Italian cookies).
But most of all, Id wait until I was hungry, sit comfortably with it and embark on a gastronomic voyage to Babbo restaurant. Id plan my menu as if the waiter was by my side with his pencil sharp, and money was no object.
For starters Id go for Goat Cheese Truffles with its perky flavours, and Jellyfish Salad just to taste something Ive always dreaded when swimming in the sea, and Warm Tripe alla Parmigiana because Ive never had tripe flavoured with vanilla, and Duck Bresaola for a treat that takes 25 days to cure and dry if made from scratch.
In the pasta department, Id try Calfs Brain Francobolli with its tiny, mushy raviolis, and Black & White Strichetti for its salt-cod content, which Ive never partnered with pasta before, and Linguine Fine with Baby Eels, as an ode to tapa-style baby eels Ive enjoyed in Spain, and Ziti with Tuscan-Style Cauliflower, because it looks so good on the picture.
For my fish Id commence with Black Bass in a Lemon Brodetto with its swimming-scallops and its bits of sauteed squash, continue with Wild Striped Bass with Charred Leeks and Squid, and finish with Sauteed Skate and Rock Shrimp in a Saffron Sweet Clam Citronette for the sheer enjoyment of the vast lists of excellent ingredients. And then there would be the meats (osso-buco, sweetbreads), the pre-desserts (sweet-savoury, cheese-based things to pave the way to the sweets), and finally the puffy, surely-exquisite Chocolate Hazelnut Cakes, and the chestnut laden (including that elusive chestnut honey) Castagnaccio, a glazed, moist slice of cake-heaven.
But you get the idea. It is possible to use this book to eat superbly without spending a penny, and without ingesting a single calorie. Since this is as close to a fine New York City Italian meal as most of us would get to, it is in fact worth every one of the sixty bucks the book itself costs.
Byron Ayanoglu (Books in Canada)