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Dolce Italiano: Desserts from the Babbo Kitchen Hardcover – October 8, 2007

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 105 ratings

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Scrumptious, easy-to-make Italian desserts from the hand of a master.

“Follow the seasons. Keep the flavors pure and straightforward. Use proper yet simple techniques.” Applying this aesthetic to the Italian tradition, Gina DePalma has created a cookbook of the desserts that have wowed diners at Babbo, New York’s most coveted reservation since it opened eight years ago with DePalma as pastry chef. From her exciting imagination spring desserts such as Sesame and White Corn Biscotti, Little Grappa Soaked Spongecakes, and Chocolate and Tangerine Semifreddo. Recipes for classics like Cassata alla Siciliana join new interpretations of traditional desserts such as White Peach and Prosecco Gelatina. More than just a cookbook, Dolce Italiano reveals the ten ingredients you need to know to make Italian desserts, along with wine pairings to accompany the recipes. Never before has a cookbook given home cooks a chance to experience the full variety and subtlety of Italian desserts. Mario Batali has called Dolce Italiano “pure inspiration.”
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Gina DePalma is the pastry chef at Manhattan's Babbo, home of Mario Batali's most acclaimed Italian fare. In Dolce Italiano, DePalma offers 90-plus doable recipes for a wide range of traditional and signature Italian sweets, such as Chocolate and Walnut Torte from Capri, Venetian Apple Cake, and Sesame and White Corn Biscotti. DePalma also provides illuminating asides on techniques and ingredients, including information on such "indispensable" items as honey, ricotta, mascarpone and grappa. Particularly notable chapters explore fried and festival sweets.

DePalma writes passionately about "dolce," revealing at one point her obsessive attempt to track down the best ricotta cheesecake. Most readers will share her attraction to the Italian dessert repertoire, which, though it lacks the richness and invention of, say, its French equivalent, appeals through simple good taste. Readers seeking a thorough introduction to Italian dessert making, presented in the context of its bounteous history and the author’s devotion to her subject, can do no better than to explore Dolce Italiano. --Arthur Boehm

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. DePalma, pastry chef at upscale Italian restaurant Babbo in New York City (owner Mario Batali contributes a foreword), approaches Italian-American desserts from three directions: traditional Italian (Polenta Cookies from the Veneto); Italian-American, learned at the elbow of her Calabrese grandmother (in a charming introduction, DePalma recalls how her grandmother used to visit her family in Virginia, stepping off the plane from New York bearing hunks of cheese, cans of olive oil and DePalma's favorite taralli); and what are best described as American-Italian. The latter are true hybrid desserts, such as a crustless Yogurt Cheesecake with Pine Nut Brittle, which combines mascarpone and the Greek-style yogurt now widely available in U.S. grocery stores. This concoction has probably never appeared on any menu in Italy, but it successfully marries ingredients and techniques from both places, without losing sight of the genuine quality that is the hallmark of Italian food. DePalma's tone is genuine, too, whether she's recalling how she woke up in the middle of the night in her Brooklyn apartment to obsess over a lemon tart or patiently explaining why real balsamic vinegar is costly, but worth it. (Oct.)
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Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 0393061000
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ W. W. Norton & Company (October 8, 2007)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 384 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780393061000
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0393061000
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.3 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 8.5 x 1.2 x 10.3 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 105 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
105 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the recipes delicious and well-received. They appreciate the attractive pictures and detailed baking instructions. The results are terrific, with great success. Readers feel the author's passion and warmth on every page through the stories.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

18 customers mention "Recipes"18 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the recipes in the book. They mention that the zucchini walnut cake is the best zucchini cake they have ever made. The book includes Italian desserts like biscotti, ricotta cheesecake, zucchini cake, panna cotta, almond and raisin cakes, chocolate and walnut torte, and sour cherry custard tart.

"...choices included a fresh cranberry tart perfect for fall, a sour cherry custard tart very similar to a French clafoutis, a blueberry and coconut tart..." Read more

"...This is yet another instance of the Italian genius for prepared and preserved intermediates, adding fruit preserves to the list of wines, cheeses,..." Read more

"...They are chock- full of hazelnuts, pistachios, and chocolate -- among the best biscotti I've ever baked, and I've baked many...." Read more

"...Along with her own entertaining memories & comments, the author has chosen delicious recipes and added the detail & history that I love to learn..." Read more

7 customers mention "Photography"7 positive0 negative

Customers like the photography. They find the pictures attractive and say the photos need framing.

"...Dolce Italiano is an absolutely gorgeous cookbook that is unparalleled in terms of culinary technique, the quality of Gina's experiences in and out..." Read more

"...The photographs make you want to try everything. I've already baked the Mosaic Biscotti and they live up to their description...." Read more

"...The photographs are beautiful, and I am counting the days until fresh figs are in season to make the luscious-looking fig tart...." Read more

"A lovely but VERY badly edited cookbook...." Read more

5 customers mention "Baking instructions"5 positive0 negative

Customers find the baking instructions in the book helpful. They say the manuals are excellent for baking in general and desserts. The recipes are detailed, with a common sense yet warm approach. Readers mention that the book provides the best biscotti they've ever baked.

"...will not serve as a complete baking manual, it has many sections of truly superb instruction on how to do some basic Italian cooking procedures, as..." Read more

"...full of hazelnuts, pistachios, and chocolate -- among the best biscotti I've ever baked, and I've baked many...." Read more

"...1st one I gave away because I liked it so much and had a great baker in mind, and it was greatly , deeply, appreciated)...." Read more

"...nut tart on the cover for a dinner party and it is amazing - very easy to make...." Read more

5 customers mention "Success"5 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the recipes. They say the end results are tasty, whether sweet or savory. The book is a big hit and a favorite at home.

"...of Gina's experiences in and out of various kitchens, and the delicious end results, whether sweet or savory...." Read more

"...away because I liked it so much and had a great baker in mind, and it was greatly , deeply, appreciated)...." Read more

"Gina was one of the great geniuses in the world of cooking. Her work is amazing." Read more

"Results are terrific. Have enjoyed everything that we have tried. Unusual recipes which are easy to prepare. Pictures are quite attractive as well." Read more

4 customers mention "Romance"4 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the romance in the book. They feel the author's passion and expertise on every page. The stories are fascinating, funny, and sweet, making you understand the setting.

"...You can just sense DePalma's expertise & passion on every page. I only hope there will be a 2nd book." Read more

"...information about each desert provides fascinating, funny and sweet stories that make you understand "where" the desert comes from--beyond the broad..." Read more

"La dolce vita......" Read more

"Dolce Italiano, dolce vita..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2008
    Gina DePalma's Dolce Italiano: Desserts from the Babbo Kitchen collects a treasure trove of desserts and savories from Mario Batali's Babbo restaurant (The Babbo Cookbook) in NYC. There are several forewords, including one by Mario Batali himself and Colum Sheehan, wine director of Babbo. Gina's thorough introduction includes her own earliest memories of her Nonni's kitchen and growing up in a Italian-American family that still revolved around the Italian style of shopping and cooking. She includes a section called Learning Italian that covers various regions, DOP and IGP origins, a recommended reading list, ten Italian ingredients you should know (some will surprise you!), and a brief, effective section on equipment.

    The first section is devoted to Italian cookies and includes several almond-based cookies (almond fingers, chocolate kisses, mostaccioli), semolina cookies (lemony semolina cookies), polenta cookies, chestnut brownies, and several biscottis (almond, orange and anise, mosaic, polenta and sesame). Many are light and refreshing rather than the heavy, dense, cloyingly sweet desserts that Americans prefer, and the presence of polenta gives baked goods a rather toothsome crunch that will be unfamiliar to American palates.

    Cakes include several gems, including grappa-soaked mini sponge cakes, citrus-glazed polenta cake, chestnut spice cake with mascarpone cream, almond and raisin cake, chocolate and walnut torte from Capri, zucchini-olive oil cake with lemon crunch glaze, yogurt cheesecake with pine nut brittle, obsessive ricotta cheesecake filled with candied orange and lemon rind, and Venetian apple cake rich with honey, spices, and polenta. The Venetian apple cake had just the right touch of sweetness from the shredded apple and honey, and the almond cake from Abruzzo was a delightful blend of toasted almonds, semolina flour, chocolate, and Amaretto.

    Spoon Desserts consist of bonets, custards, bavarians, panna cotta, and zabaione, many of them savory additions such as pumpkin, fresh bay leaf custards, yogurt with caramel, aged balsamic, and pine nut brittle, and a lovely cool rhubarb soup with orange and mint fior di latte that is a refreshing start to a spring or summer dinner.

    My favorite section was the Tarts, a personal favorite of mine. Unusual choices included a fresh cranberry tart perfect for fall, a sour cherry custard tart very similar to a French clafoutis, a blueberry and coconut tart, the divine honey and pine nut tart (you can't convince me that this isn't what angels eat!), chocolate and polenta tart (obscenely good with a scoop of gelato), and fruit tarts (fig, lemon, apple crumb, hazelnut and grape).

    The next section sounded good, but lacking an ice cream maker, I was unable to try out any of the ice creams or sorbets. However, if/when I do purchase one, the fig and ricotta gelato, ginger honey gelato, and espresso cinnamon gelato are tops on my list.

    I don't eat fried foods, so I haven't had the chance to sample any of these firsthand. Fried treats include fritters (pumpkin, herbed goat cheese, lemon ricotta, apple), Florentine doughnuts with vanilla custard, Neapolitan doughnuts with warm chocolate sauce, and cream puffs.

    Ways with Fruit includes traditional fruit-and-alcohol combinations such as strawberries in Chianti, Balaton cherries with grappa and mascarpone, white peach and prosecco gelatina, honey-baked figs stuffed with walnuts, sweet apple omelet, and marmelades (Meyer lemon and spiced blood orange).

    Celebrations includes holiday dishes such as St. Joseph's Day cream puffs (served on the feast day of St. Joseph, March 19), Easter egg bread, sweet grape focaccia (served at the annual grape harvest), chocolate "salami" (relax, vegetarians, it's made out of chocolate and nuts and rolled in powdered sugar to look like casing!), panforte (a traditional fruit-and-nut-stuffed bread from Siena) and pandoro (sweet Christmas breads).

    The final chapter, Savory Bites, includes breadsticks, taralli (similar to pretzels), semolina and sesame crackers, calcioni, and cheese puffs (Gina includes notes on her favorite Italian cheeses).

    Dolce Italiano is an absolutely gorgeous cookbook that is unparalleled in terms of culinary technique, the quality of Gina's experiences in and out of various kitchens, and the delicious end results, whether sweet or savory. The only potential downside is difficulty in locating specific Italian ingredients such as millifiori honey, decent grappa, Piedmontese hazelnuts, fresh chestnuts and chestnut flour, fresh (not commercial) ricotta and mascarpone cheeses, "OO" flour, aged balsamic (although I've had luck at Zingerman's Deli in Ann Arbor, [...]) and Sicilian pistachios, although Gina includes a "Sources" section at the back of the book (that is, if you don't mind the expense of having your cheese overnighted from NYC!!).

    If you're a fan of Italian / Mediterranean cuisine, you owe it to yourself to add this to your collection, presto. This is a beautiful cookbook that will bring you hours of enjoyment as you discover traditional Italian desserts that combine sometimes unlikely pairings that result in taste bud-tickling creations that taste like something your Italian grandmother would have baked.
    40 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2007
    `Dolce Italiano, Desserts from the Babbo Kitchen' by Babbo pastry chef, Gina DePalma is another in a long list of cookbooks from high end restaurant pastry chefs such as Sherry Yard (Spago), Kate Zuckerman (Chanterelle), and Emily Luchetti (Stars). And, like all of these other superior books, Mme. DePalma offers far more than a simple presentation of recipes.
    While both Yard's `Secrets of Baking' and Zuckerman's `The Sweet Live' both serve as excellent manuals on baking in general, and Yard's latest `Desserts by the Yard' is a great culinary memoir with even greater recipes (as well as a great source of recipes for Austrian classics), DePalma takes yet another route by presenting a serious reference on shopping for, baking, and serving Italian dessert specialties. A jaded reader of Italian cookbooks has some right to be just a bit skeptical that Mario Batali's employee Ms. DePalma, a better than average restaurant chef (not yet at the heights of the Wolfgang Puck's Sherry Yard), can come up with a better than average book on her well-travelled subject. But, she does succeed and I am happy to have this book among all these other distinguished books.
    To be sure, Ms. DePalma does cover much familiar ground, but starts to broaden her appeal when she adds discussions of desserts and wines to her narrative, with the assistance of the very impressive credentials of the Babbo wine experts, lead by employer Joseph Bastianich. In fact, she mentions a major Italian staple, vin cotto (cooked wine), which has escaped my attention in all these readings. In a nutshell, it tends to fit many of the same roles as the far more expensive balsamic vinegar.
    While this book will not serve as a complete baking manual, it has many sections of truly superb instruction on how to do some basic Italian cooking procedures, as in her three page sidebar on `Pastry Crust 101'. Having read everyone from Martha Stewart to Rose Levy Beranbaum to Nick Malgieri on making basic pie crust, I amazingly find Ms. DePalma's description to be one of the pedagogically most satisfying. In plainer words, she says the same things, but the way she describes them make the subject easier to understand if you are a beginner. For a Brooklyn girl, her insights into Italian cuisine are often as interesting and as profound as her boss, the orange-clogged Batali. One observation is especially acute, when she notes that unlike many Americans, the crust to a pastry is at least as important to Italians as what you put in that crust. This is entirely consistent with their passion for the quality of breads and pasta, giving them equal attention as the more splashy sauces and toppings which go with the spaghetti or the pizza. And, like the French, there are many desserts which may be no more than two exquisitely prepared ingredients, the crust and a fruit jelly, jam, or preserve. This is yet another instance of the Italian genius for prepared and preserved intermediates, adding fruit preserves to the list of wines, cheeses, breads, vinegars, salumis, and pastas which make Italian cuisine appear so effortless and yet so great.
    While virtually all the recipes in the book were developed to be served at Babbo, they still represent a superb reference for so many classic Italian sweets. Some leading examples are biscotti, ricotta cheesecake, zucchini cake, panna cotta, zabaione, baked polenta, breadsticks, panforte di Siena, and strufoli. The only major Italian dessert I did not find were the iconic canolis.
    The book's design leans just a bit toward the budget-conscious, as all the color pics of the desserts are in a few centrally bound rotogravure signatures, rather than right next to the recipe. I also miss illustrations of the basic kitchen tools and graphic instructions on the otherwise excellent tutorials on technique. And yet, I was immediately impressed with Ms. DePalma's excellent map of Italy with all its major political regions and cities plainly and clearly laid out. It could have used just a bit more detail, such as pointing out the location of the Amalfi coast (south of Naples), the source of Italy's best lemons.
    Like Ms. Yard and Ms. Zuckerman, Gina has a way with her words in putting together her recipes and procedures. All procedures are effortlessly detailed and all ingredients such as type of fruit, vinegar, wine, of flour, are precise, without being arcane. She is also so kind as to recommend methods for both garnishing the dessert and storing the leftovers.
    In case this is not obvious, there is very little in this book about bread baking. For that, I suggest (as does Miss DePalma) that you go to Carol Field's classic `The Italian Baker'. And, a thank you to Mario for suggesting to Miss Gina that she write this very worthy book.
    30 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 17, 2007
    I pre-ordered this wonderful dessert cookbook because I have eaten at Babbo and loved it. There are many excellent Italian cookbooks out there, but few include as many authentic and delicious desserts as are in Dolce Italiano. The book reads like an insider's guide to the best of the best! The photographs make you want to try everything. I've already baked the Mosaic Biscotti and they live up to their description. They are chock- full of hazelnuts, pistachios, and chocolate -- among the best biscotti I've ever baked, and I've baked many. I was planning on freezing some, since the recipe is large. Guess what? They were scarfed down in no time!!!
    17 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 17, 2011
    I am so glad to have found this wonderful treasure! Studying it has become my new hobby. Along with her own entertaining memories & comments, the author has chosen delicious recipes and added the detail & history that I love to learn about regional Italian cooking. I have never been a great baker, but everything I have made from this book has turned out just delicious. I decided to purchase a dozen copies for holiday gifts & I can hardly wait to share these recipes with friends & family. You can just sense DePalma's expertise & passion on every page. I only hope there will be a 2nd book.
    One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Tami
    5.0 out of 5 stars A good read
    Reviewed in Canada on July 23, 2018
    Loads of information about dessert history in Italy. Well written. Can't wait to try it out.
  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Decadent and delicious
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 16, 2008
    I bought this book a few weeks ago and have since began to experiment from it...problem is that now I can't stop! After wonderful bakes such as the pine nut tart and the ricotta poundcake I have tried various biscuits, tarts and cheesecakes and they're all mouthwateringly tasty. Some of my other favourites are the courgette and olive oil cake (if you like carrot cake you are going to love this wonderfully moist cake), the most lemony ever lemon tart, the Greek yoghurt and mascarpone cheesecake, and a bluberry and coconut pie. I always look forward to the evenings and weekends when I can try another delicious treat and have yet to be disappointed. Even ordinary almond biscuits are lovely. I have quite a few baking books and this one is the one I use fearlessly when expecting company - it's wonderful when you can trust a recipe book and know that you won't fail if you're expecting guests. This is one of those books that gives you this confident comfort. A firm favourite and I have only had it a couple of weeks.

    Like all Italian dessert books it does contain a few recipes for ice-cream and sorbets, but even if you don't have an ice-cream machine, this book is worth buying for the tarts, cakes and biscuits alone. For some strange reason us Europeans seem to fear the American cup system (which is used in this book) but I honestly don't see what all the fuss is about. Is it really that difficult to fill up a cup with flour or sugar and put it into a bowl? I personally think it is far easier and less messier than weighing. I use ordinary 220 ml cups or 250 ml mugs, and everything always turns out fine even without proper measuring cups...but if you're still worried that your measurements might be wrong, a set of measuring cups costs about a pound at Sainsbury's.
  • Thomas Richards
    3.0 out of 5 stars Italian Cook Book
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 2, 2021
    Very good written content. Should have more pictures
  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in Canada on July 31, 2015
    Awesome recipe book . Still working my way through it .
  • M. Marley
    2.0 out of 5 stars I hate to say this but it was disappointment
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 24, 2016
    My book has arrived and I can't wait to try some of the recipes. But as this could be sometime away I thought I would review on my initial impression of the book. I hate to say this but it was disappointment! I pawed over the cover before settling down with a cuppa ready to devour the pages one by one. My first question was "where are the pictures?" There are some, but not that many. There is no reference within the recipes where to find the relevant picture although there is a page reference on the photo where to find the recipe. This would be helpful if there was a photo for each or most of the recipes. Secondly, some images are place within pages of a different section. For instance, the image of Chocolate and Tangerine Semifreddo is found within the Tart section and the recipe is on page 192 in the Ice Cream, Sorbets and Semifreddos section. Now, maybe it is just me but I like to look at pictures of food, that is what attracts me, when I see a picture I like I go and find the recipe. I am hoping I will grow to love the book, after all it was £25.