Audio Tour: East Somerville Cook Book

Emma Jacobs
East Somerville isn’t just Louis’ Ice Cream. A new cookbook takes readers on a tour of all the tastes of the neighborhood.
Rebecca Novak helped to gather the collection of recipes from neighborhood restaurant and residents for the East Somerville Main Streets.
fritatta

Marie Annese and Charlotte D’Angelo run family business Broadway Break with their brother, Phil D’Angelo.
When they were growing up with four kids and two parents, Charlotte says, her mother had to cook big. However, her mom’s Easter recipe for Italian fritatta had never been written down.
Ugandan sauce

In Uganda, Sammy Mulondo says, most food is steamed in banana leaves, which are understandably hard to come by in the United States. There are workarounds for cooking food Ugandan-style on American cooking equipment, but Sammy says the results don’t quite taste the same.
pasticcio di silvana
Julia Renalds and her husband, Emanuele, started baking his mother’s Italian recipes so that he could keep in touch with his native Italy. She submitted the recipe for his mother’s lasagna without telling him, and presented him with a finished cookbook during a visit to his family, who still live in Northern Italy.
dairy-free scone

Iseti Reis and her husband Ademar own Boston Cookie. They bake their vegan cookies with the help of their son, Sunrey. They no longer make Iseti’s favorite recipe, their vegan scones. She remembers how different the early days of the business were, and hopes to bring back her favorite item someday.
The official launch party for the cookbook and an exhibit of photography from the book will be held on April 17th, 1-3pm in East Somerville. You can pick up your own copy here.
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they are great …please come to florida i rente a space for you guys ……and lets bake in the sun and have fun…seling the coockies ….let’s go
this is great a love it …………ii want to eat some scone hahahahahah where ????
I already bought the book and these wonderful stories only add to a fantastic effort. I am looking forward to the launch party today!
If an Italian grandpa cries over it, even tangentially, then that’s a recipe that I’ve got to try…
I really like how some businesses began serendipitously, without the owner’s initial intention. They were just normal ppl who one day decided to take a risk on what they felt they did reasonably well.