Meeting Valentina Harris
September 25, 2013 by LindsayCertainly to our U.K. readers, where she is such a well-respected authority on Italian food and food culture, Valentina Harris needs no introduction. For anyone who hasn’t met her, she has been writing award-winning cookbooks since 1984, when she published Perfect Pasta. She’s now written over 30 books on Italian food,and still finds time to host culinary adventures across Europe.
Five of her favorite regional cookbooks have now been gathered and reissued as a set, Regional Cooking of Italy. Included in the collection are The Food and Cooking of Tuscany, The Food and Cooking of Sicily and Southern Italy, The Food and Cooking of Venice and the North-East of Italy, The Food and Cooking of Rome and Naples, and The Food and Cooking of Milan and Bologna. And we are particularly delighted to be able to offer five free sets to our members – just add a comment on this cookbook giveaway blog. Do not post here to enter as your entry will not be counted.
We recently asked Valentina to talk about her passion for Italian food:
It’s no secret that I love my native country with an enormous passion, and although I no longer live in Italy full time, and have not done so since my early twenties, I find my way back to everything that it means to me through the multi faceted food and wine of its many and varied regions.
I was brought up in a huge house in Tuscany, just a few steps from the beach, with an olive grove, a vineyard, chickens and rabbits for the table and big, fat, happy pig hidden behind the shed containing the (entirely illegal) grappa still, for sausages, salame, prosciutto and blood sausage – biroldo in the local dialect. There was a large well tended vegetable garden that yielded a seemingly endless bounty of fragrant, fresh vegetables and herbs for use in the cooking, until winter came, and then the only surviving vegetable, seemingly for months on end, was the unforgiving, coarse and peppery cavolo nero, which I still associate with the unyielding damp of a Tuscan January.
That kitchen was central to everything in our house, it was always a busy, buzzing place, filled with delicious smells and wonderful colours and an alluring sense of great delight. I was never turned away, I only needed to peep around the door and I would be welcomed in and given a job to do: a pile of vibrant green beans to top and tail or some earth coated carrots to scrub clean.
I grew up surrounded by a great sense of the importance of food and of sitting down to eat at a beautifully laid table, where the food and the flow of enjoyment and conversation were vital to everything else that went on in and around our home.
As a child, I can remember adults discussing the quality of the new season polenta flour, a loaf of bread or the first pressing of our own olive oil with the same intensity usually devoted subjects such as politics, love or a favourite football team. It is not surprising, looking back on that idyllic foodie childhood, that by the time I was eight years old I had converted the family sandpit into my first, single(very wobbly ) table restaurant; where I served up sand pies, leaf salads and stews made out of gravel with gravity and pride.
Once I qualified as a chef, in Rome, I began to study Italian cuisine in some depth and discovered that one of the things that makes it enduringly interesting is the fact that it is so varied, with so many regional specialities, very local culinary traditions and stories and anecdotes that give many of the dishes extra spice. This series of books explores many of those delicious aspects of Italian food and it is my way of taking you on a culinary journey, with me, through all the Italian regions I have come to know and love over the years.
I have carved out a career from my love of Italian food and wine and now, with over forty titles to my name, I am still as fervent about my subject as I was when I cooked up my pies in that sandpit!
Buon appetito, and happy cooking all’Italiana!
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