Book Description
Eating Again, no ordinary cookbook, is a therapeutic travelogue. Author Alice Carbone Tench describes her journey as "culinary self-care, Italian food, and a pinch of rock 'n' roll." Visit Alice's life through her family and friends, her spiritual mentors, her battles with alcoholism and addiction, depression, and eating disorders, her childhood home in the foothills of the Italian Alps, and her cooking. Emerge with not only a collection of plant-based Italian recipes, but with the serenity she's found and just maybe, with a better, healthier life. "Alice Carbone Tench knows that cooking is a spiritual practice: we seek, we bond, and we heal by preparing meals with our hands. Spending time with Eating Again feels like hanging out in the kitchen with a cool, trustworthy confidante, sharing recipes and memories and maybe a few tears. Alice holds nothing back, and she'll make you want to cook (and live) the same way." - Jeff Gordinier, author of Hungry: Eating, Road-Tripping, and Risking It All with the Greatest Chef in the World "There is nothing in the world I love more than a cookbook that tells a personal story, and Alice Carbone Tench has written a beautiful book. Her bright, genuine tone and vibrant takes on Italian food will transport you. While one can experience her joy-filled Instagram videos, the book tells the deeper story. The connection to her history and to her family- both from Piemonte and Apulia, and the story of her deep relationship to her grandmother-really inform this collection. What a great book of easy to execute (and coincidentally) vegetarian recipes!" -Michelin-Starred chef Patti Jackson "Through Alice's writing and her recipes, you can feel her struggles with unhealthy eating patterns, her love for her grandma, even the warmth of sunshine in Tuscany. This is more than a cookbook; it's a creamy frittata for your heart and soul." -Julie Cohen, director of Julia, the new documentary on Julia Child, and RBG "Eating Again is a cookbook that's focused on whole-person health and infused with the flavors of Italy. Her recipes are the highlight of the book, but they wouldn't be the same without the personal stories interspersed between sections. As the recipes invite people to Tench's table, the stories open up her life and heart. They surround ideas of home and body image and venture from childhood to motherhood with grace, honesty, and compassion." -Melissa Wuske, Foreword Reviews