Penfield Books showcases Italian Touches: Recipes and Traditions by Fred L. Gardaphe. Italian Touches incorporates Italian contributors: Mary Beth (Menna) Specht, Joeann (La Sorella) Tesar, David Wright, Don Fiore, Joseph Sciorra, PhD, and Jerome Krase, PhD, to explore Italian ways and traditions. Between 1870 and 1924, twelve million Italians left their native land. Nearly half of them came to America, seeking a new life that would be better than the grinding poverty of southern Italy. Now almost sixteen million Americans claim Italian descent with the third, fourth, and fifth generations of Italian Americans retaining many of the values and the charm of their grandparents and great-grandparents. Theirs is a noble heritage. In terms of history, art, architecture, literature, and triumphs of the human soul, the Italian experience has been an inspiration to the western world. Italian Touches covers the Italian greats in history, religion, writers, literature, Italian American Organizations, the arts, architecture, dancing, film, theater, and more. Essays by Gardaphe include poignant writing about his Italian mother and father. Gardaphe is a distinguished professor of literature in New York. This book is a revision with updated and additional text from the title, Italian American Ways, released by HarperCollins about thirty years ago. Fred Gardaphe describse the rich family traditions and celebrations in such great detail you can almost smell the sauce steam rising from the page. One such family gathering, his Uncle plucked a meatball with his thumb and forefinger from Grandma's cooking pot in the kitchen. He walked back to the living room devouring the meatball with a sauce stained white shirt. When Fred tried the same, his Grandma emerged from the pantry and bounced a colander against his head and spouted, "Don't be a porco. We gonna eat now. The pasta she ready." Sixty-seven pages of delicious mouth-watering Italian family favorite recipes are included.
Show morePenfield Books showcases Italian Touches: Recipes and Traditions by Fred L. Gardaphe. Italian Touches incorporates Italian contributors: Mary Beth (Menna) Specht, Joeann (La Sorella) Tesar, David Wright, Don Fiore, Joseph Sciorra, PhD, and Jerome Krase, PhD, to explore Italian ways and traditions. Between 1870 and 1924, twelve million Italians left their native land. Nearly half of them came to America, seeking a new life that would be better than the grinding poverty of southern Italy. Now almost sixteen million Americans claim Italian descent with the third, fourth, and fifth generations of Italian Americans retaining many of the values and the charm of their grandparents and great-grandparents. Theirs is a noble heritage. In terms of history, art, architecture, literature, and triumphs of the human soul, the Italian experience has been an inspiration to the western world. Italian Touches covers the Italian greats in history, religion, writers, literature, Italian American Organizations, the arts, architecture, dancing, film, theater, and more. Essays by Gardaphe include poignant writing about his Italian mother and father. Gardaphe is a distinguished professor of literature in New York. This book is a revision with updated and additional text from the title, Italian American Ways, released by HarperCollins about thirty years ago. Fred Gardaphe describse the rich family traditions and celebrations in such great detail you can almost smell the sauce steam rising from the page. One such family gathering, his Uncle plucked a meatball with his thumb and forefinger from Grandma's cooking pot in the kitchen. He walked back to the living room devouring the meatball with a sauce stained white shirt. When Fred tried the same, his Grandma emerged from the pantry and bounced a colander against his head and spouted, "Don't be a porco. We gonna eat now. The pasta she ready." Sixty-seven pages of delicious mouth-watering Italian family favorite recipes are included.
Show moreFred Gardaphé was born in Chicago and raised in Melrose Park, Illinois, a predominantly Italian American community. His grandparents on his mother's side emigrated from Bari, Italy. On his father's side, his grandmother's family emigrated from Basilicata, his grandfather's family from Canada and France. He attended Sacred Heart Grammar School, Fenwick Preparatory High School (Oak Park) and Triton College (River Grove) where he earned an Associate of Arts degree in 1973. He earned a Bachelor's of Science Degree in Education at the University of Wisconsin- Madison (1976), a Master's Degree in English at the University of Chicago (1982) and his PhD in Literature at the University of Illinois at Chicago (1993) with an emphasis on cultural criticism and American multicultural literature. With his former wife, Susan, he has two children. They are Frederico, who worked as Deputy Director of Presidential Correspondence in the Obama White House from 2008 to 2013 and is currently a student in the MBA program at NYU's Stern School of Business, and Marianna, the mother of their two grandsons.
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