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The Harry's Bar Cookbook

by Harry Cipriani

More than 200 recipes--from the world-famous Bellini cocktail to carpaccio to Risotto Primavera--make these first-time-ever-revealed secrets of the legendary restaurant and celebrity watering hole a culinary treasure. 125 color photographs.

FORMAT
Hardcover
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Publisher Description

A delectable collection of nearly 200 recipes from the legendary restaurant Harry's BarThere is only one Harry's Bar. Located on Venice's Calle Vallaresso, near the Piazza San Marco, this restaurant has been the meeting place for artists, writers, royalty, maestros, divas, celebrities, the very rich, and lots of ordinary-but very wise-Americans and Europeans for over five decades. In The Harry's Bar Cookbook, Arrigo Cipriani shares his favorite stories about Harry's Bar-and reveals treasured recipes for the restaurant's most popular dishes.Harry's Bar, above all, is a bar, whose distinctive mixed drinks were created by its founder, Arrigo's father Giuseppe Cipriani. You'll find careful instructions for making the world-famous Belini-the frosty, frothy combination of rose-colored peach elixir and Prosecco-and the secret of making the Montgomery, named by Ernest Hemingway himself, which is the driest, most delicious martini in the world.Harry's Bar is famous for its mouth-watering, overstuffed, unique sandwiches, but the restaurant's risottos and dozens of pasta dishes-including ravioli, cannelloni, and tagliolini-are the house specialties. The Harry's Bar Cookbook presents recipes for these world-renowned dishes and also includes chapters on meats, vegetables, soups, sauces, desserts, and more.Opinionated and full of surprises, Arrigo reveals the secrets of his kitchen and bar accompanied by lavish, full-color photographs that make the feast a visual one as well. The Harry's Bar Cookbook is much more than a cookbook- it's an enduring experience to be savored and enjoyed.

Author Biography

Harry Cipriani is the son of Giuseppe Cipriani, founder of the original Harry's Bar in Venice. He is also the owner of the New York restaurants, Bellini and Harry Cipriani.

Excerpt from Book

DRINKS It''s Harry''s Barwe mustn''t forget it; it''s not Harry''s Restaurant. The drinks we serve, the bar itself, the people gathered around it, often in so many layers that they completely block both doorways . . . these are the essence of the place. Dark-lacquered wood, gray marble, Art Deco ashtrays. A large glass bowl of blood oranges. A huge, beautifully shaped glass carafe in which we still make my father''s martini: a whole bottle of chilled gin and a little vermouth. Stir and pour into 18 glasses and put them in the freezer. When you serve the martini, this glass frosts like no other. Sit at the bar and watch the bartender make 24 Bellinis for the party upstairs. Bottle after bottle of cold, rosy peach puree, into the cocktail shaker with bottle after bottle of cold Prosecco. Twenty-four Bellini glasses filled with ice, lined up on a tray. Dump out the ice, pour in the rosy Bellini until the glass is full, with a quarter-inch of foam on top. It''s been our most popular drink since my father invented it sometime in the thirties. It didn''t have a name until he christened it in honor of the artist for the big Giovanni Bellini exposition in Venice in 1948. Tending bar is a fine art, and my father was an artist par excellence. He smiled all the time because he was enjoying what he was doing. At the same time he was effortlessly making one perfect drink after another. Here as elsewhere, simplicity was his trademark. He knew that almost everyone who comes into a bar wants one of the most common drinksthere are perhaps 20 of themand those are the ones he had at his fingertips. Once in a while a customer would ask for something very esoteric or fancy. He would always say, gently and courteously, "Can you tell me how it is made? Then I can make it for you." The basic drinks are simple and are all variations of five kinds of spiritsgin, vodka, rum, whiskey, and brandycombined with sparkling water, fruit, vermouth, or liqueurs. Most of the drinks we sell are one or another of these combinations. But people''s tastes do change, and the sales at the bar naturally reflect this. Just as in times of crisis or anxiety people always return to sweet, heavy traditional cooking, so there are moments for certain drinks. Sometimes gin is in; sometimes it''s vodka. Some years people like sweet drinks; sometimes they won''t touch them. Recently there''s been a revival of the classic old sweet liqueurs such as Chartreuse and Cointreau. I can still remember the days when old Mr. Cointreau, well into his eighties, would drink seven or right of his own liqueurs every day. It''s important to keep the atmosphere pleasant in a bar. I think that''s easier to do in Italy than in the United States because in the United States people go to bars primarily to drink and perhaps get a little drunk. In Italy it''s a social occasionto have a drink or two and to see people. Of course, once in a while you''re having such a good time seeing people that you find yourself getting a little drunk. . . . But I''m always careful; if anybody drinks too many martinis, I intervene. My father set a standard for good drinks that we still try to meet. A good drink is very cold and strong enough that you know you''re drinking something. I don''t like it when bars serve a little splash in a big glassor when they put in too much ice to make it look like more. To keep drinks from getting watery, we always use large ice cubes instead of the small ones so many people seem to prefer. Ice machines that make large cubes are not so easy to find, but we insist on it. We keep bottles of gin, vodka, and vermouth in the refrigerator and always chill our glasses. The proportions of a drink are all-important. We have standard proportions for all our drinksbut we also know how to adjust them to please certain customers. But I think it''s mostly the peopleand the atmosphere in the barthat make our drinks taste so good. People always ask for our drink recipes, and of course I''m giving them to you now, but please don''t expect them to transport you to Harry''s Bar. You''ll have to use a more conventional vehicle for that. THE BELLINI Like so many things in "the good old days," making the white peach juice for Bellinis was a lengthy and tedious process. We had a man who did nothing all day but cut up and pit small white peaches and squeeze them with his hands to extract the juice. The juice and pulp were then forced through a chinoisa fine, cone-shaped sieveto form the rose-colored elixir that is mixed with Prosecco to make Bellinis. Prosecco is the Italian version of champagne and comes from the region around Treviso. The Bellini was a seasonal drink then, available from June through September. Now we are luckywe can get excellent frozen white peach pur

Details

ISBN0553070304
Author Harry Cipriani
Short Title HARRYS BAR CKBK
Pages 304
Language English
ISBN-10 0553070304
ISBN-13 9780553070309
Media Book
Format Hardcover
Illustrations Yes
Year 1991
Photographer Christopher Baker
Place of Publication New York
Country of Publication United States
DOI 10.1604/9780553070309
Subtitle Recipes and Reminiscences from the World-Famous Venice Bar and Restaurant
AU Release Date 1991-10-01
NZ Release Date 1991-10-01
US Release Date 1991-10-01
UK Release Date 1991-10-01
Publisher Random House USA Inc
Publication Date 1991-10-01
Imprint Bantam Dell Publishing Group, Div of Random House, Inc
DEWEY 641.5945
Audience General

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