I don’t believe I’ve ever met a pasta I didn’t like. There are, however, many pasta shapes I’ve not had the pleasure of meeting—yet. In An A–Z of Pasta, Rome-based author Rachel Roddy introduces readers to 50 of them, some of which, like brichetti, are not often found beyond specific Italian regions. (As if I needed another reason to visit Italy someday.)

This is no mere collection of dishes, however; it is a specific window into Italian history and geography, thick with sense of place. Take fregula, little balls similar to couscous. “A tiny shape . . . particularly stout and . . . nutty,” they are native to Sardinia, where women have traditionally been tasked with making them (not a small job, despite the small shape). Roddy is a knowledgeable storyteller and low-key witty. Of fusilli, she writes, “One day I will watch an extruder forming fusilli while smoking a joint and listening to the Incredible String Band. As with any invention that has become commonplace, we take a pasta machine that can extrude perfect spirals for granted.”

Roddy’s lamb ragu with lots of herbs, “a Friday night dish,” sounds amazing, as do numerous other recipes included here. This book is essential for anyone passionate about Italian cooking.

You May Also Like
Book review of The Lost Boy of Santa Chionia

Book review of The Lost Boy of Santa Chionia

“Too bad I never went to detective school,” Francesca Loftfield muses near…
I’m a Trans Man, but I’ve Become My Mother

I’m a Trans Man, but I’ve Become My Mother

“On the Pioneer Woman” by Krys Malcolm Belc Nearly twenty years after…

The Forger and the Thief by Kirsten McKenzie

Set in Florence, Italy in the lead up the 1966 floods, The…

The Book of Stolen Dreams

When Rachel Klein was born 12 years ago, Krasnia’s oceanside capital of…