Cooking with Fernet Branca
Cooking with Fernet Branca book cover

Cooking with Fernet Branca

Paperback – September 1, 2005

Price
$20.74
Format
Paperback
Pages
281
Publisher
Europa Editions
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1933372013
Dimensions
5.31 x 0.84 x 8.23 inches
Weight
11.2 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly Usually writers taking a holiday from their serious work will use a pseudonym (DeLillo as Cleo Birdwell), but British novelist Hamilton-Paterson ( Gerontius , etc.), who lives in Italy, bravely serves a very funny sendup of Italian-cooking-holiday-romance novels, without any camouflage. Written from the alternating perspectives of two foreigners who have bought neighboring Tuscan houses, the book has no plot to speak of beyond when-will-they-sleep-together. Gerald Samper is an effete British ghost writer of sportsperson biographies (such as skier Per Snoilsson's Downhill All the Way! ); neighbor Marta is a native Voynovian (think mountainous eastern bloc) trying to escape her rich family's descent into postcommunist criminality—by writing a film score for a "famous" pornographer's latest project. Each downs copious amounts of the title swill and carps at the reader about the other's infuriating ways: Gerald sings to himself in a manner that Marta then parodies for the film; Gerald relentlessly dissects the Voyde cuisine Marta serves him, all the while sharing recipes for his own hilariously absurd cuisine. Rock stars, helicopters, the porn director and son, and Marta's mafia brother all make appearances. The fun is in Hamilton-Paterson's offhand observations and delicate touch in handling his two unreliable misfits as they find each other—and there's lots of it. (Oct.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Praise for Cooking with Fernet Branca “I’ve never laughed so hard. Giving good-natured belly aching laughter is a real gift. Thank you James Hamilton-Paterson.” ―Chelsea Clinton, Entertainment Weekly “. . . a bagatelle of a book, a sex romp with recipes, a weekend getaway for the mind.” ―Dwight Garner, The New York Times “The fun is in Hamilton-Paterson's offhand observations and delicate touch in handling his two unreliable misfits as they find each other--and there's lots of it.” ― Publishers Weekly "Though Cooking with Femet Branca sounds like the title of an offbeat cookbook, it is, in fact, a devilishly funny novel, complete with stomach-turning recipes.” ―Gastronimica James Hamilton-Paterson's first novel, Gerontius, won the Whitbread Award. He is an acclaimed author of nonfiction books, including Seven-Tenths, Three Miles Down and Playing with Water. He currently lives in Italy. From The Washington Post If one were to imagine the house of fiction, the Serious Novel would be the front parlor, a showcase of antique furniture, with a few well-chosen prints on cream-colored walls and a Steinway baby grand in the corner (note the Chopin Etude artfully displayed on the keyboard stand). The large but unfinished basement, distinctly cluttered and prey to mildew, would be Mysteries, Romance Novels, Science Fiction and Fantasy. The small sun-room -- lots of glass, a good view of the sky and stars, some potted plants, a cat asleep in a ray of afternoon light -- could only be Poetry. Cooking with Fernet Branca might look as though it belongs to the kitchen (the domain of Comfort Books -- a hodge-podge category embracing all kinds of writing about food and drink, some travel literature, many collections of letters and diaries). In fact, James Hamilton-Paterson's latest novel settles nicely into the playroom, for it is a silly, amusing and utterly inconsequential jeu d'esprit. There's nothing at all important to the book, aside from witty prose and a broad but affectionate lambasting of some recent cultural manias -- boy bands, UFOs, Tuscan villas, cooking, Do-It-Yourself projects, filmmaking, sports celebrities, the new Europe, gay tastefulness. It's really a summer treat at heart, and a good one to stash away for some bleak October evening. Our story opens with Gerry Samper -- English, well-educated, reduced to ghostwriting the biographies of downhill skiers and race-car drivers -- ensconced in a small, isolated cottage high up a mountain overlooking the Mediterranean. He's in Le Roccie to finish his latest work-for-hire, contemplate his somewhat uncertain future and, most of all, indulge his passion for creative cookery. Gerry's tastes are, shall we say, gastronomically adventurous, though virtually all his dishes require anywhere from a teaspoon to a bottle of Fernet Branca (which Gerry himself downs like spring water even though it appears to possess the alcoholic kick of grappa or slivovitz). "Mussels in Chocolate," "Fish Cake," "Garlic Ice Cream" and "Baked Pears in Cheese Sauce" are among his favored delicacies, and he thoughtfully provides directions for their preparation, often adding a bit of personal commentary: "Incidentally, this is the only recipe I know [for "Otter with Lobster Sauce"] that is associated with a curse. Two acquaintances who tried to make the dish died within the month, one in Buckinghamshire and the other in Somerset. By the quirkiest of mishaps both fell into rivers in spate and vanished into millraces. The cleric's body was found three weeks later, much disfigured. The drama teacher was never seen again. On enquiring I discovered that each had used commercial mayonnaise purchased in a supermarket for this recipe, so there is some justice in this world after all, even if a bit on the lenient side. Certainly the Bishop should have known better. No decent cook gets to heaven by way of Hellman's." By the way, you are right to detect a slightly camp, swishy tone to Gerry's voice. He is what his neighbor Marta calls a "dudi." He even sings snippets of opera while preparing his wondrous dishes. Naturally, we are treated to brief descriptions of his most coloratura showpieces, including "Ennio's exhilarating aria 'Non disperdere nell'ambiente, cara,' from Lo stronzolo segreto. It's when Nedda is threatening to throw away the little flask of tears she has wept for him and he begs her not to. By all means the tears (he sings), for roses will spring up wherever they fall to earth; but not the antique Venetian bottle I bought for you. . . . This may, in fact, be the earliest example of environmentalism in opera." His neighbor Marta? Alas, Gerry's unscrupulous real estate agent Benedetti misled him about the isolation of his little villa. An émigré from the nation of Voynovia, newly liberated from the Soviet yoke, has moved into a similar hut quite nearby. In Gerry's eyes, Marta appears a semi-literate peasant, garbling broken English, constantly imbibing Fernet Branca. She is, in truth, a young composer and the eldest daughter of a great ancestral house, though her father has apparently served in the Soviet secret police and now oversees a mafia cell. Through a bit of luck, Marta has been invited to Italy to work on the score for a new film by the cult director Piero Pacini, best known for the saturnalian "Nero's Birthday." But Marta, having grown up in a sheltered household, has never seen this film, nor any of Pacini's others. What's more, she is lonely for her sister and brother, for the sight of Mt. Sluszic, for the taste of kasha and shonka. We learn this through her letters home and through her own narration, which soon alternates with Gerry's. Neither artiste, it turns out, can believe that the other is anything more than a Fernet Branca-swilling dudi or a Fernet Branca-addicted slattern. And so the reader settles down to enjoy that ever fresh standby of light entertainment, the comedy of a couple who consistently misunderstand each other about almost everything. But, in this instance, especially about food: "I want to learn you all of Voynovia," says Marta to Gerry, "the fooding number one of all. Voynovian fooding best in all Europa, best in all of world. Is . . . mm." This is the sort of English that Gerry hears, but in her own chapters, Marta writes perfectly grammatical sentences and is indeed quite an intellectual. She even has her doubts about those orgies that Pacini has inserted into a film supposedly about peaceful Green Party idealists, traditional fishermen and the legacy of fascism. Yet just as Marta soldiers on with her music, Gerry soon finds himself entertaining Brill, the leader of the world's most famous band (who wants the author of Downhill All the Way and Hot Seat! to write his biography). Before long, privies are destroyed and fences built, helicopters start to land regularly -- either piloted by Marta's criminal brother or bearing Pacini -- and film crews descend en masse, followed by Italian carabinieri. The humor grows funnier and, naturally, ever more tasteless: We learn that Brill was abused by druids, that Gerry wears trendy Homo Erectus jeans and once invented the LFM diet for a women's magazine ("Half a bottle of Fernet Branca a day, plus a single multivitamin pill and all the lard you can eat"), that vegetables have feelings, that Jane Austen wrote a novel called Donna and, not least, that "Jack Russells are absolute buggers to bone, notoriously so, but yield a delicate, almost silky pâté that seems to welcome the careworn diner with both paws on the edge of the table, as it were." And lots, lots more. But don't even ask what an R rating stands for in Italy. The wide-ranging James Hamilton-Paterson has published all sorts of books, from Gerontius, a Whitbread Award-winning novel about the composer Elgar, to a study of Ferdinand Marcos. His prose is always original and extremely winning, and he himself lives in Italy, to which, among other things, Cooking with Fernet Branca is a sly love letter. As Gerry says, when he joins Piero Pacini and company for lunch: "A huge table is laid with buffet dishes from which we begin spearing and spooning liberal portions of this and that before seating ourselves with a large glass of white wine apiece. Be honest, who would live in England?" Or in Washington? France maybe, though Italy is well-nigh irresistible. As is Cooking with Fernet Branca. Copyright 2005, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • "A playful book, full of fun and games. There is so much pleasure to be had from Hamilton-Paterson's delight in language and wicked way with unreliable narrators. . . . The book's effect is achieved almost entirely through the comic magnetism of a single character."-
  • The Times Literary Supplement
  • "A skillful, highly original writer. . . . The elegant language, witty asides and vivid observations are memorable."-
  • The Literary Review
  • "I'm bowled over by the sheer imaginative brilliance of the man."-Barry Humphries
  • "I love his elegant and intensely evocative style: strangeness lifts off his pages like a rare perfume."-J.G. Ballard
  • "A work of comic genius."-
  • The Independent
  • "A wonderfully rich alloy of sub-Wildean witticisms and nonsense,
  • Cooking with Fernet Branca
  • had me laughing out loud and uproariously."-Ian Thomson,
  • Sunday Telegraph
  • Gerald Samper, an effete English snob, has his own private hilltop in Tuscany, where he wiles away his time working as a ghostwriter for celebrities and inventing wholly original culinary concoctions-including ice cream made with garlic and the bitter, herb-based liqueur of the book's title. Gerald's idyll is shattered by the arrival of Marta, on the run from a crime-riddled former soviet republic. A series of hilarious misunderstandings brings this odd couple into ever closer and more disastrous proximity.
  • James Hamilton-Paterson
  • 's first novel,
  • Gerontius
  • , won the Whitbread Award. He is an acclaimed author of nonfiction books, including
  • Seven-Tenths
  • ,
  • Three Miles Down
  • , and
  • Playing with Water
  • . He currently lives in Italy.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(84)
★★★★
25%
(70)
★★★
15%
(42)
★★
7%
(20)
23%
(64)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Laugh out Loud Funny!!!

This is one of my favorite books ever! It is clever, quirky, odd and rip roaringly hilarious. Gerald and Marta's relationship is so fun to witness that I was sad to see this book end!

Having said that though, I can see where this humor may not appeal to everyone. It can be dry and subtle but once you put it together it makes you laugh out loud! If you like the comedy of the BBC - Ab Fab, Fawlty Towers, Monty Python, Eddie Izzard - then this is a book for you. If you don't find humor in those shows / comedians, you may not enjoy this in it's full hilarity either.

This book made me so curious about Fernet Branca, I ran right out and bought a bottle. I'll save my review on that so you can taste it for yourself. ;)
10 people found this helpful
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Cooking with Samper

The story is a scream. Told from two differing perspectives of two transplanted neighbours in Tuscany. The author's expressive writing on fictitious recipes gives you the urge to want to try smoked cat with of course, a dash of Fernet Branca! My only complaint was in reaching the last page.
8 people found this helpful
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I would love to have this brilliant writer for dinner!

I found Cooking with Fernet Branca in my rented villa during my honeymoon last week. I was laughing out loud and sputtering in Italian - which I don't speak - for days. I only have six pages left and I am dragging it out to last as long as possible. BRAVA!!!
6 people found this helpful
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A Brilliant Waste of Time

James Hamilton-Paterson said in an interview that he wanted to write a book that could be tossed away as soon as it was finished. His ambition has been fully realized. Read and savor this priceless novel and then throw it into the trash along with a couple empty bottles of Fernet. I don't think I've read a sillier book than this one. It raises irrelevance to an art form. More please!
6 people found this helpful
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I have recommended this novel to many people

I have recommended this novel to many people. It is knock-down drag-out hilarious. Maybe too English for English people, but great for the rest of us. Hamilton-Paterson shouldn't be forgotten.
4 people found this helpful
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Delightful story with cooking tips you don't want to use.

A good laugh. Cooking tips that make you want to gag, but they all fit into this delightful tale. The setting is perfect and the characters are a riot.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Delightful story with cooking tips you don't want to use.

A good laugh. Cooking tips that make you want to gag, but they all fit into this delightful tale. The setting is perfect and the characters are a riot.
3 people found this helpful
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Cooking With Hilarity

Hamilton-Paterson flawlessly folds Into this souffle folded many ingredients seemingly disparate, resulting in hilarity and desire for more. Told in alternating voices, the plot soars hilariously. Marta, a composer from Eastern Europe, and Gerald, a ghost-writing ex-pat from England, live in mutual disharmony, misdirection and misunderstanding on a Tuscan hilltop. It helps, but is not necessary, for the reader to be somewhat knowledgeable about Pier Paolo Pasolini, East European mafia, gourmet cooking. Add to this, Boy Bands, UFOs, ghostwritten "autobiographies," Italian filmmaking. Not since "Somebody is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe" have there been recipes of such escalating ludicrousness. Hilarious! I'm gratified to learn that there are at least two books that follow this one.
3 people found this helpful
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SOOOOOOO funny!

The book is wonderfully hilarious. Fernet Branca has become a favorite joke in our family. (I am afraid that our children gave us a whole great big bottle of it! We serve it to unsuspecting guests.) I have sent copies of the book to many friends, and I am looking forward to reading some additional works by Mr. Hamilton-Paterson.
2 people found this helpful
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Entertainment Plus!!!

The first in a trilogy of very, very funny novels by an extremely talented writer. His asides and observations are both pithy (I'm NOT lisping) and humorous. An adroit, observant, charming essayist of a novelist. His recipe for Panda Paws ("...discard the rest of the animal") soaked in"tikkhu" juice, the fermentation of which attract tigers and bamboo wolves "...so you had better mount a sentry..."
is hilarious. The whole damn book is hilarious. Buy it!
2 people found this helpful