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2010 Holiday Guide & Twelve Days of Christmas

copyright 2010 art of living,PrimaMedia,Inc.

Here it is..just in time  for the 12 Days of Christmas..our 2010 Annual Holiday Guide…filled with extra special ‘foodie’products ‘discovered’ by our  team of Editors (and me too!) while scouting for gifts. The Madame Alexander doll can be found at www.madamealexander.com

 We are hard at work already for the Spring Holiday Gift Guide, so if you have any gift or product suggestions email to us at editor@marialiberati.com If your product suggestion is selected you will receive a free ebook version of ‘ How to Make the Perfect Pizza’

and it’s not too early to plan your Feast of the Seven Fishes (for Christmas Eve)dinner..

Let us know what will be on your menu ..and tell us where you will be spending your Christams Eve or Holiday dinner,send jpegs as well..we will be selecting Holiday photos   to place on the blog. I’ll be spending my Christmas Eve in the mountains of Abruzzo and polsting photos and recipes as well!

Here’s a recipe from my Feast of the Seven Fishes menu…

Cod (Merluzzo) in AcquaPazza (Crazy Water) (for 2 people)

*Codfish  (fresh or fresh frozen) 1/2 pound divided into 2-3 pieces

*4 (fresh, red, ripe) medium size plum tomatoes or canned San Marzano  tomatoes (3 or 4 without the tomato juice) 

*2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

*2 garlic cloves

*1/2 t o3/4 cup dry white wine (or water) ‘

*3 tablespoons fresh chopped or torn parsley pinch of red hot

pepperoncino (red pepper )-optional

*2 thick slices of crusty bread-place under broiler till golden

Place in saute pan- olive oil, garlic saute for 1 minute, then tomatoes > fish, parsley and wine. Then cook 10-15 minutes or until fish is cooked.  Serve cod on top of bread slices and pour sauce on top. Garnish with  fresh parsley on side.

Don’t forget to enjoy  this year’s Annual Holiday Guide

Get more recipes for your Feast of the Seven Fishes Dinner  in the Award Winning Holiday Book The Basic Art of Italian Cooking: Holidays & Special Occasions-2nd edition

Mangia Bene, Vivi Bene,

Maria

Food, Wine, Books..the Perfect Combination

Favorite thing I enjoy  about  being on my book tour for my latest release The Basic Art of Italian Cooking: Holidays & Special Occasions-2nd edition  is meeting so many ..and hearing of new little towns and places and traditions and foods..most Italian and some from other parts of the World..every culture in the World is somehow related to food.

At an event last weekend someone shared with me their Romanian grandmother’s recipe for a type of eggplant dip..A pizza maker,so proud of his pizza told me  a story of how he found out that one of his customers enjoyed his pizza with ketchup on it..so insulted he was that he told this customer he would never sell him pizza again…and on and on the food stories go…

My second favorite part is that I get to share my knowledge of wines and cooking with wine recipes and tips.. And when speaking about wines..my first suggestion is to read the label of the wine..just as if you would read a food label.. But I realized that many terms used on wine labels are in Italian and some terms are technical similar to  musical terms…you know Allegro…con vivace…con dolcezza…and not always easy  to decipher.

Here are some of my favorite wine terms you can find on bottles or  or you may over hear these terms at your next wine tasting:

Abboccato- lightly sweet

Amabile-semi sweet

Azienda Agricola or Vitivinicola-the farm or estate that produces all or most of the grapes for wine sold under its’ label

Cerasuolo- cherry-hued rose wine

Chiaretto-deep rose

Dolce- sweet

Consorzio-consortium of producers

Enologo-an enologist with a university degree

Fattoria-farm or estate

Invecchiato-aged

Frizzante-bubbly,sparkling

Imbottigliata- bottled

Passito or Passita-partially dried grapes and the strong sweet wines made from them

Rosso-red wine

Secco-dry

Spumante-sparkling dry or sweet wine

Uva-grape

Vino Novello- literally means new wine. But it is a wine that must be bottled and sold within the year of it’s harvest.

Vino da Tavola-table wine, not usually with a DOC or trademark. Most homemade wines are vino da tavola

Vendemmia- harvest

See you: 

November 13th at Borders Express in Woodbridge, NJ

December 3rd -Feast of the Seven Fishes Dinner and Book signing at Copper Fish Restaurant in Cape May, NJ

Peace, Love & Pasta,

Maria

Lemon & Couscous..a Fragrant Thought

Couscous is a pasta too!..Most of us  don’t think of it as one. But in Sicily a dish of couscous is commonly served as  first course as is a pasta dish. Here’s my  recipe for an  easy to make, bright, fragrant couscous dish. Use  Meyer Lemon oil to emphasize the fresh lemon taste.

 lemon couscous

Lemony Couscous

1 cup couscous

1 1/4 cups water

1  teaspoon Meyer Lemon  Oil

1 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

3/4 tsp sea salt or kosher salt

1/2 cup shopped scallions

1/4 cup chopped leeks

1 fresh garlic clove minced

finely grated peel of 1 fresh lemon

1/4 tsp of freshly ground black pepper

In a saucepan (2-3 quart size) heat water till boiling. Add in couscous when boiling with sea or kosher salt. Cover and reduce heat. Simmer for approximately 10 minutes, stirring once.

Place Extra virgin Olive Oil in small saute pan. Place in scallions, leeks, garlic and saute on low to medium heat for 3 minutes or until leeks & scallions, garlic, have just begun to turn golden. Stir in lemon peel. Remove from heat.

Drain couscous. Place couscous in saute pan with garlic mixture. Toss gently, drizzle with Meyer Lemon Oil.Serve and top with freshly ground black pepper. For garnish decorate plate with long strips of lemon peel or fresh lemon slices and fresh ,torn mint leaves.

Shop for yummy specialty oils and Balsamic vinegars to liven any dish

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For lots of Holiday Ideas, Recipes, Tips, get your copy of the book selected as The Best Italian Cuisine Book in the USA- The Basic Art of Italian Cooking: Holidays & Special Occasions-2nd edition

*October 14th-Lower Southampton Twp Library-book signing and Olive Oil & Balsamic Vinegar tasting and presentation

*October 27th-11AM-NBC TV !10 Show (morning magazine show-0check your local paper for listings)

*October 29-31- Philadelphia Gourmet Food & WIne Show-Culinary Book Signing event-signing copies of The Basic Art of Italian Cooking: Holidays & Special Occasions-2nd edition

*Nov 2nd-Franklin Lakes Library-Book singing and Olive oil sampling & Tasting

*Dec. 4th-Borders Princeton, NJ

 Shar Family food memories right her on our blog in our Share the Joy Feature

Peace, Love & Pasta.

Maria

Sunflowers and a Tuscan Summer

 

“Every friend is to the other a sun, and a sunflower also. he attracts and follows”

Jean Paul Richter (German novelist and humorist 1763-1825)

copyright 2010 Maria Liberati/art of living,PrimaMedia,Inc

This phrase rang so true in my head spiraling along the winding curves of the hills of Chianti. Rows of sunflowers seemed to be bowing to the beautiful Tuscan sun, and they almost seemed to be smiling as a welcome to this beautiful region.

Along Route 222 passing through the beauty that is Chianti, I begin to remember that  here may have  once passed DaVinci, Michelangelo, Giotto.. My eyes dance in the landscape of  castles and villas and vineyards that in some way may have been touched by these artistic masters and I  begin  to feel as if I am in a colorful kaleidoscope..or  in a living painting..for the scenery is too perfect to be real.

Driving through the Hills of Chianti part 1

Continuing the drive along we almost become hypnotized with  the vines that seem to decorate the hills. Well, for me it’s  a problem I’m only the   passenger, but Alfonso is driving and although he has been silent for over a half  hour, too dazzled to speak ,we quickly remember that we are going back to our castle in Radda in Chianti and have lost our way..”Are you looking for Route 222? he mutters. “Yes, Yes” I answer, just to appease him..I really had no idea where we were..but wanted to just continue riding along (what seemed to be) the endless hills..

Luckily when I regained my consciousness, we were really on Route 222 continuing back to Radda in Chianti…passing through the little towns of Impruneta, Greve in Chianti and then Radda in Chianti..we both breathe a sigh of relief and decide that tonight we will go for a coffee and a passeggiatta in Radda in Chianti..a warm August night  will make the perfect canvas for an evening walk.

Driving thorugh the Hills of Chianti Part 2

As we drove up the Piano D’Albola (the plains of Albola)  I tried to imagine how the nobility that once lived here entered the gates and the long drive up to the main house, but I could hear my stomach rumbling as I thought of the fresh porcini mushrooms we bought at the market today..a pasta dish with porcini mushrooms was definitely in order.

Under castello D’Albola in the Original Cantina

Lunch for that day was a yummy Penne ai Porcini  ( a plate of penne pasta with porcini mushrooms),served with white wine from Castello D’Albola-produced here. Since this dish includes fresh mint the preparation included a mandatory  walk outside along the castle walls to follow my nose and  pick fresh bunches of mint… it only calls for a  small handful but the fragrance was so enticing I picked a bit more and put  the remainder in a  (makeshift vase) - large  plastic water bottle cut in half- with some fresh water- and used it as our table centerpiece..

 Penne ai Porcini (Penne Pasta with Porcini Mushrooms)

 

1 lb of penne pasta

5 funghi porcini

1/4 lb of pumpkin

1 scallion

1 handful of fresh mint chopped finely

2 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil

dash of freshly ground black pepper

salt to taste

Chop scallion. Clean mushrooms with a damp paper towel and cut into slices. Take off sin of pumpkin and cut into small cubes.

Place olive oil in saute pan, place in scallions and saute over medium heat for 2 minutes, then place in mushrooms,saute. After 5 minutes place in cubed pumpkin. Saute for 10-15 minutes over low heat, stir gently. Add in salt, then add in chopped mint and toss, saute for 2 minutes and remove from heat.

Place penne in boiling water and cook as indicated on package directions till al dente. Drain and place into sauce, toss gently, grind black pepper on top and serve

For more great recipes get your copy of the award winning The Basic Art of Italian Cooking : Holidays & Special Occasions-2nd edition the book that was selected as the Best Italian cuisine Book in the USA by Gourmand World Cookbook Awards.

Be A Guest Writer and Share the Joy! and your food memory

Visit  me at OpenSky

October 3 see you in Sacramento, California at the Italian Cultural Center

October 12th- Lower Southampton Library in Feasterville, Pa

Otober 29-30 the Philadelphia Gourmet Food & Wine Show in the Valley Forge Convention Center

I Promessi Sposi..& A Chocolate Ricotta Cheesecake

 

i promessi sposi

One of my favorite pieces of  Italian literature is I Promessi Sposi.. (The Betrothed) so romantic.. A  story of Renzo and Lucia, set in Italy in 1628 the book was first published in 1827 and set in a time when Italy was under oppressive Spanish rule. One of it’s main themes is the strength of love between two people.

  I am enjoying the musical that has been made from the original book in Milan tonight…nothing beats the power of love ( well maybe a chocolate cheesecake) and getting ready to get back to our country house to close it up till next summer..

Summer is almost gone…hope you got to experience some of summer’s pleasures.. fresh, local fruits and veggies, gelato or ic and ice cream…al fresco picnics…picking strawberries or blueberries…lazy days at the beach or park or just allowing yourself to be lazy at home fro a few days or even a few hours.

What  goes better with ‘I Promessi Sposi’ than a dark chocolate cheesecake..

Chocolate Ricotta Cheesecake

 

chocolate ricotta cheesecake

1-16 ounce package of  Cream Cheese

8 ounces Ricotta cheese

1/2 cup sugar

1 tsp vanilla

2 eggs

1 package of Savoiardi cookies or similar cookies

1 8 ounce bar dark chocolate

2 tsps orange honey

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Crush cookies and cover bottom of pie pan with crumbs. Grae chocolate bar onto crumbs, then drizzle two tsps honey on crust.

In bowl place cream cheese, ricotta cheese, eggs, vanilla. Blend till smooth. Pour onto crumb crust. Bake fro 30 minutes or until firm. Cool and refrigerate,serve chilled.

For more great recipes, get your copy of the award winning book The Basic Art of Italian Cooking: Holidays & Special Occasions-2nd edition..selected as Best Italian Cuisine Book in the USA

**Be a Guest writer..have Holiday food memory to share..in honor of the release of the Holiday book we are inviting our readers to share their stories of Holiday food memories. Stories selected will be placed on the blog and archived and may be selected to be placed in a national publication. Email stories to sharethejoy@marialiberati.com

Sept 10 & 11 –see you at Hudson Valley Wine Fest, Rhinebeck, NY at Dutchess County Fairgrounds. The Basic Art of Italian Cooking by Maria Liberati tm will be on stage at 1-2 each day. For more info email: info@marialiberati.com

Share the Joy! with some Fettucini Alfredo…

 copyright 2010, art of living, PrimaMedia,Inc

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In honor of the official release of The Basic Art of Italian Cooking: Holidays & Special Occasions-2nd edition (ISBN 978-1928911-19-7) the award winning recipe novel that includes recipes and Holiday food memories- we will be posting one story a week from our readers about their favorite food memory and why it holds a special place in their heart. This is the first, and we will be posting one new story each week till December 31st. Thanks Jennifer for sharing this great story with us!

From:  Jennifer Reich, co author of the new book The Mommy MD Guide to Pregnancy and Birth and cofounder of www.MommyMDGuides.com

My husband and I honeymooned at Walt Disney World in 2002. We were married in their beautiful wedding pavilion with a view of Cinderella Castle. That night , we enjoyed a great meal at the Italian restaurant in Epcot. I had their delicious Fettuccine Alfredo, one of the best meals I’ve ever had. A few weeks after we got home, I found the recipe online for that restaurant’s fettuccini alfredo. Now I’m not the best cook ever–a passable cook at best. But there must have been a little pixie dust included with that recipe because I managed to recreate dish just as I remembered it from my honeymoon!”

 Here’s a Recipe for a Lighter version of Fettucini Alfredo

Fettuccine%20al%20tartufo

Be a Guest Writer:If you have a special food memory and would like to share it with our 100,000+ subscribers from all over the world, email the story to: sharethejoy@marialiberati.com  For more details

Get your copy of the book that was selected as Best Italian Cuisine Book in the USA- The Basic Art of Italian Cooking: Holidays & Special Occasions-2nd edition

Filled with recipes, charming stories and food memories from a country house in the mountains of Italy and Holiday ideas.

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Frittata & White Truffles..at il Vittoriale

copyright 2010, art of living,PrimaMedia,Inc/Maria Liberati

il vittoriale 1 Vittoriale_2_450

It was the beginning of summer, much like today,the warm summer sun  ‘kissing’ the mountains of Abruzzo and an invite to go to a spot known as ‘il Vittoriale’ in a resort known as Lago di Garda (Garda Lake).

Vittoriale was the last known but much loved  home of famed Italian statesman,poet, writer, politician-Gabriele D’Annunzio.

We arrived in Garda and the next day began to set out on our intended journey, to il Vittoriale. Set aside the water’s edge with a brightly colored flower garden decorating the borders.  D’Annunzio was a very interesting figure in Italian history. Walking through the place is like walking through an open book of his writings..you could tell that he was from Abruzzo because of the  Abruzzese ‘chitarra’ used to make the famed dish ‘pasta a la chitarra’

He always said ‘chi piu gode conosce’ literally translates as the more someone enjoys or savors  something the more they will understand how to appreciate it. And appreciate and enjoy he did ..frequently. There are postcards that he wrote to his chefs after a great dish was prepared….One begins”:Dearest Albinia: Your fritatta, after eating many other mediocre ones, is sublime! I consider myself someone who has tasted many slices of frittata around the world”.he goes on to say how he loved this frittata so much that he would testify in front of St Peter when he gets to heaven that this was the best frittata in the world!

The thought of a delicious frittata..I  no longer was  interested in history..I have to admit that my eyes kept glancing down at my watch for 1:00 (l’ora di pranzo) lunchtime. We had reservations at Aquariva..and were so looking forward to the ‘tagliolini fatta a casa’(homemade egg noodles) with white truffles.

Situated on the marina..could the color blue be any bluer than  sunny day here?

The tagliollini were inspiring..befitting the palate of one Gabriele D’Anninzio..but still thinking of that illustrious he must have experienced to pen that postcard.

Spinach Frittata

frittata-spinach

6 eggs

8 ounces fresh spinach, washed, chopped, sauteed with garlic & olive oil

1/4 cup parmigiano-reggiano freshly grated

pinch of salt

dash of freshly ground black pepper to taste

3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

1 clove garlic

In large saute pan, place olive oil and whole clove of garlic. Saute for 2 minutes over medium heat, remove garlic. Break eggs into bowl and whip with wire whisk for 2 minutes, add in pinch of slat and dash of freshly ground black pepper. Place in chopped, sauteed spinach.Stir with fork, place in freshly grated parmigiana-reggiano.Stir. Pour egg mixture into heated olive oil. Saute, till sides are cooked. Toss onto plate and trun over and cook on opposite side.

Serve hot or cold..makes a great filling for a portable pannini…

Sept 9-12th-Hudson Valley Wine Festival-Rhinebeck, NY, on stage cooking appearance and Book Siginng of the book voted as Best Italian Cuisine Book in the USA-The Basic Art of Italian Cooking: Holidays & Special Occasions-2nd edition

Visit me at OpenSky

http://twitter.com/Marialiberati

Maria

http://www.marialiberati.com

where food meets art ,travel & life!

Almond Cake for Passover

copyright 2010  Maria Liberati

I love Holidays ..especially Spring Holidays..it’s like we are waking up after this long winter nap and all of a sudden..Bam!! there they are  the shining rays of  the sun..real flavors of strawberries and asparagus and mint..and lnoger days…. and if that isn’t enough to celebrate..along comes some Holidays that give us a reason to bring friends and family together with incredible dishes. At my house, we  celebrate Easter but I love some of the flavors  of Passover and like to ‘mix things up’.

Almonds are used a lot in Italian cooking and one of my favorite flavors..so if you’re a fan of the healthy almond you will want to make this cake part of your Spring Holiday meal

  Almond  Passover Cake

6 eggs

1 cup white sugar

1 cup finely chopped almonds

2 teaspoons of maraschino liqueur

juice of one fresh lemon

With an electric mixer, blend sugar with egg yolks till well blended,then add in first the chopped almonds and then liqueur and lemon juice.  In separate bowl,whip egg whites till firm with a pinch of salt. With a wooden spoon, blend in the egg whites to the egg yolk mixture,gently. When blended in, place batter  in pan lined with parchment paper. Bake for 30 minutes at 350 degrees. Remove from oven and let cool and serve. Happy Passover! Happy Easter! and let me know about any other Spring Holiday we should be celebrating!

For more great recipes get your copy of:

  The Basic Art of Italian Cooking: Holidays & Special Occasions  voted Best Italian Cuisine Book in America by Gourmand World Cookbook Awards.

Mangia Bene, Vivi Bene,

http://twitter.com/Marialiberati

Visit me at OpenSky

Happy ‘Day After Valentine’s Day’…

copyright 2010, Maria Liberati

Gail_Ambrosius_Cinnamon-Cayenne_Chocolates

I think we should make the ‘Day after Valentine’s Day’ a  Day to celebrate!! … boxes of chocolates are still there to be enjoyed.. half opened bottle of  Prosecco still in the fridge waiting to be finished..so there… you have  some of the makings for one special meal-Prosecco and chocolates.

So celebrate..the “Day after Valentines’ Day” ..as a special Occasion.. Tonight’s meal is Farfalle with Gorgonzola cheese served  with Prosecco (left over from last night’s dinner) and chocolates for dessert..and to keep things warm..and light- chocolate truffle coffee for an after dinner drink.

Farfalle (bow tie pasta) in Gorgonzola

vosgesCopyright 2009-2010 from The Basic Art of Italian Cooking: Holidays & Special Occasions winner of the Gourmand World Cookbook Awards

4 ounces Gorgonzola cheese

1 tablespoon +  ½  tblsp butter

3 tablespoons cold milk

1 lb of farfalle (bow tie) pasta

4 tblsps of  pasta cooking water

Place gorgonzola in saucepan with butter and milk, melt over low to medium heat. Add in pasta cooking water to thin sauce. Cook farfalle till al dente. Toss pasta  in Gorgonzola sauce. Sprinkle with chopped fresh parsley. Serve with a glass of  Santa Margherita Prosecco.

For more recipes and menus to make any day a Special Occasions

visit me at OpenSky

Mangia Bene, Vivi Bene,

Maria

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A Tale of Grappa..

grappa-b.jpg

Copyright 2009, Maria Liberati

Editor: Kate Hollinger

 

Grappa, a native Italian drink not for the faint of heart, is not as popular as the wines of Italy but just as intriguing! Although there are many tales and theories regarding the origin of grappa, it was first made in the Northern town of Bassano del Grappa as early as the Middle Ages. For centuries, grappa has been a remedy for farmers and working class to endure the cold. It remained solely for the poor families until the 1960s, when it reached the general public. Many drank a shot of it with their morning coffee before heading out for a long day’s work and it is rumored that sometimes children were given a shot before trekking through the cold winter weather to get to school.

 

While grappa’s name is most likely due to its town of origin, Bassano del Grappa, the word “graspa” in Latin translates literally to “grape-stalk” as well. Grappa is made by distilling pomace brandy with grape residue left over from winemaking. The main components used from the grape are most commonly the skins but sometimes the stems and seeds as well. Originally this was done to prevent waste so that all of the grape was used, but now it is continued due to popular demand. Some grappa is not a result of the wine leftovers, as “prima uva” grappa is made from whole grapes. This is for the true grappa fans!

 

Grappa is a fragrant drink with flavors that vary depending on the type of grape used and the distillation process. The alcohol content is usually somewhere from 35 to 60 percent, so it is definitely a strong one! Most grappa is clear in color but some take on tints from the grape and the older the grappa, the more likely they are to hold tones of yellow or brown from the barrels they are stored in. While grappa can be aged, they do lose some fragrance over time and are best stored in a cool, dark atmosphere.

 

Nowadays you don’t see too many people drinking grappa as their main drink. Often it is served as a “digestivo”, or after dinner drink. It is said that grappa helps the digestion process after large meals, and some will even add espresso to it and serve with dessert. If drinking it plain, it is best to serve the younger grappas in a chilled tall thick glass, and the older ones at room temperature in a brandy snifter. While distilling grappa is a somewhat expensive process, you can find bottles all over nowadays for as little as $10 a bottle.

 

And while it is an old wives tale that grappa has been used to remedy toothaches, rheumatism, and even bronchitis, this “firewater” is best drank solely for the love of grappa!

Thanks for all who came out to meet me at the my book signing/cooking demo at the  Bethesda Row event at Bella Italia in Bethesda, Maryland this weekend. Enjoyed meeting you all and sharing stories and recipes with you.

Here is a list of more upcoming appearances..Hope to see you there:

 

 

Tuesday, June 2nd 7 PM- Book Signing & Cooking on a Budget with The Basic Art of Italian Cooking with Celebrity Chef Maria Liberati. Recipes from her best selling book and The Basic Art of Italian Cooking School in Italy. Samples provided. Kenilworth Library, 548 Kenilworth Blvd., Kenilworth, NJ 908-276-2451

June 4th- Foster’s Gourmet Store ,Philadelphia, Pa, 399 Market St, phila, Pa 19195 215-925-0950.Call Temple Univ to register call Temple Univ continuing ed at 215-204-6946. Includes 4 course sample of authentic Italian picnic $55 www.temple.edu/tucc

June 6th- Horsham Day-Book signing and The Basic Art of Italian Cooking School demo with Celebrity Chef Maria Liberati. Deep Meadow Park 1-3 PM

June 7th-Book signing and on stage appearance-Chicago Tribune Literary Festival- Printer’s Row Chicago. Celebrity Chef-Maria Liberati will be bringing The Basic Art of Italian Cooking School to Chicago along with a book signing. The Basic Art of Italian Cooking was one of the books specially selected to be a part of this annual event. For more info email:events@marialiberati.com

June 15th- Book signing and Cooking on A Budget with The Basic Art of Italian Cooking. Demo of how to cook on a budget with recipes from the best selling book,samples and recipes provided. Willingboro Library- 220 Willingboro Parkway, Willingboro, NJ

Get your copy of my beest selling book at http://www.marialiberati.com

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Mangia Bene, Vivi Bene,

Maria

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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