
This has to be the recipe with the name that's the most fun to say - say "ahl-yo ee ohl-yo" three times fast!
This piquant pasta preparation was a favorite lunch of mine many years ago when I worked in Milford, MA, and could get lunch at an unassuming watering hole that had a few old Italian specialties like this and Porchetta.
It's not as spicy as you might think, but it's easy to amp up the basic recipe for more punch if you like it that way.
This is one of those superfast dishes that you can whip up in the time it takes to boil the pasta!
This is an American dish, unknown in Italy except through American tourism. In Milan, veal gets the treatment that we think of as piccata. That's because in Italian, the word piccata means a thin escalope of meat, usually veal. It's commonly dressed with a lemon or lemon-caper sauce, and called Piccata al Limone or something similarly descriptive.
Here's an old Yankee favorite!
The original recipe for this was tasty but difficult, so I've modified it slightly: please see the notes below for details.
This delicious dinner came from an old cookbook that has great photos and numerous text errors. Every recipe must be thought through carefully to see if anything is missing, measurements are suspicious, etc. But it has some great ideas, like this one. For example, this one is called "Mussels with a Sea Tang", but there's nothing that I see as maritime except for the mussels themselves! Anyway, it's delicious.
Here's a colorful, simple, and delicious pasta recipe, traditionally served with spaghetti or other long dried pasta, and never served with cheese.

I'm told that this is the most common way of serving pasta with pesto in Genoa, the home of 
Here's a great savory fall dish that highlights that autumn star, sugar pumpkin, in a way that complements both meat and fish dishes, and is excellent on its own for the vegetarians.
I stumbled upon this recipe in a cookbook that I inherited from Richmond and Annette, with the page corner turned down. Naturally I had to investigate. It's summery, delicious, and very easy!
This is a simple savory dish suitable for a work night. The sauce is simple and tasty, good over rice!
Nothing could be simpler than this epicure's favorite from centuries past - good pasta tossed with a 
Here's a humble, very traditional cool-weather dish: slow-cooked lentils.