Memoir looks at mid-20th century Calgary

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Memoir looks at mid-20th century Calgary

Postby newsposter » Sun Nov 12, 2006 11:59 am

'Spaghetti Western' looks at mid-century Calgary through the eyes of Italian immigrants who brought the first Italian restaurant to Calgary:

Review excerpt (John Gilchrist - Calgary Herald)
It's a Saturday night and Calgary's hottest Italian restaurant is packed to the rafters. Professional athletes, politicians and the new generation of oil barons are dressed to the nines and enjoying veal scaloppine and spaghetti Milanese. Some don't even arrive until after midnight, and they eat and laugh until the 3 a.m. closing time. The parking lot is filled with new Cadillacs and Fords and a couple of Packards.

Packards? Sure, it's 1953 and La Villa is in full swing...

http://www.canada.com/calgaryherald/new ... 650acd6638

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From the publisher:

Spaghetti Western
How My Father Brought Italian Food to the Canadian West

Spaghetti Western is the story of Genesio (Gene) Cioni, his family, community and the food that made him famous during the fabulous fifties when he introduced the West to Italian cooking.

Gene's story is the quintessential immigrant success story, told with a flair for narrative by his daughter Maria Cioni. Gene was just sixteen when he arrived from Antrodoco, in the Abruzzi region of Italy, to find one vibrant, close-knit Italian community in the burgeoning city of Calgary in the 1920s. It is in this unlikely frontier city that Gene left his profession as a barber behind to follow his passion for food and cooking, as he worked his way up from busboy to cook to become one of western Canada's first celebrity chefs. With his wife, Martha, Gene opened Calgary's first Italian restaurant.

Maria's recollections of growing up in a restaurant family are authentic, detailed, and perceptive, bringing alive the food and treasured traditions that enriched her family's life. Included in the book are recipes for some of her father's favourite dishes-secret spaghetti sauce for one hundred people, meatballs, polenta, lasagna, gnocchi - along with the secrets behind Gene's original style of cooking Calgary's T-bone steaks, his famous anchovy salad and how he introduced pizza to his colourful clientele.

Italian immigrants frequently faced discrimination and suspicion, especially during the Second World War when they were classified as enemy aliens. For Gene and his German-American wife, Martha, it was doubly difficult. In response, they worked hard to ensure that there would be no bias of any kind in their restaurants. Gene's was a meeting place for Sugarfoot Anderson, Stu Hart, Duke Ellington, Primo Carnera and city society, including business leaders, sports heroes, and politicians, but Gene always had room in his restaurant and his heart for immigrants who needed a helping hand.

"There is a powerful sense of the sweep of time and an anchoring in the spirit of place. A revelation."
-- Margaret Visser

Maria Cioni was born in Calgary, Alberta. She completed a master’s degree in history at the University of Calgary, and a PhD at Cambridge University in England.

Maria is the principal of Maria Cioni and Associates, a specialist in the field of international education. She is a contributor to Mamma Mia! Good Italian Girls Talk Back and has appeared on Biography with Carolyn Weaver as well as being featured in the Calgary Herald and on CBC radio. She lives with her husband and daughter in Toronto.

1897252021
8 x 9, 144 pages, Trade Paper
Biography and Autobiography/Personal Memoirs

$24.95 CAD

http://www.fitzhenry.ca/detail.aspx?ID=9917
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