Born in Milan to a cultured and well-heeled family in 1925, a period when the Fascist ideology was well established, Anna resisted at every turn the Fascist ideology that had formed the backdrop of her early life. She recalls wearing “silly armbands and uniforms”, spending the war years in the Emilia-Romagna area where food was plentiful but so were Fascist and Nazi sympathizers. She was arrested twice, believed to be a “staffetta” (a courier for the partisans). She recalls that at the end of the war in April 1945, her family made tagliatelle for the American soldiers who had brought coffee. The Del Contes experienced their first decent cup of coffee in years.
Her return to Milan was bittersweet. Gone was the home on the tony Via Gesu and gone were many of their friends. In their place were rationing,
She met and married Oliver Waley, had three children and spent her adult life in a foreign country. Her return to Italy included trips to their summer home in Tuscany and later in Venice, and work-related visits. She often remarked that being Italian and living in England made her feel like neither fish nor fowl (ne’ carne ne’ pesce). Her married mom days were spent cooking for family and friends who always asked for pasta that she dressed with unheard of sauces: bucatini alla carbonara, penne ai quattro formaggi. She introduced her sons’ young friends to polenta and biscotti. And she herself learned to make a great paella from her Spanish au-pair! And when she and her family hunted for those mushrooms on Wimbledon Common, Anna prepared them “a cotoletta” -breaded and fried in golden butter – for her sons and their friends. This was a huge change for the English, she noted.
From the 1950’s to the early 1970’s, Del Conte maintained part time jobs while managing her family life. She was an interpreter for Robson-Lowe Limited, the premier philatelic dealer; taught at London College and London Opera Centre and gave private Italian lessons. In 1973, she got a call from a friend whose father owned Paddington Press, a small UK book publisher. He had expressed interest in her writing a definitive book on the history of pasta: the shapes, the making, the people, not just recipes. Her career as a cookery writer was launched!
In 1976, her hard work of research in Italy and testing recipes paid off. Her first book, Portrait of Pasta was published by Paddington Press in both the UK and also a US version
With Secrets from an Italian Kitchen and Entertaining all’Italiana, Del Conte truly developed her own style of recipe research and testing from 17th and 18th century cookbooks. She gave us many lost gems, such as risotto al limone and chicken in sweet and sour sauce.To date, she has written or co-authored or edited over 25 cookbooks. She was also a regular contributor to Sainsbury’s (like our Safeway) Magazine with a monthly feature, Anatomy of an Ingredient and later Travels at Table, which combines travel and food. She consulted for them on producing Italian food commercially. In 1981 she began her TV cookery demonstration career. Del Conte writes that she was too shy, not comfortable on a podium or speaking to large groups to make a go of a TV career. She also had a successful cookery school in the Chianti area of Tuscany. In April 2007, her beloved Oliver died. They had moved from London to Dorset to be near their daughter and grandchildren. Today, the 94-year-old Del Conte continues to live in Dorset “thinking of all the meals to cook and share with her grandchildren”.
Nettles are a bit like spinach, a bit like arugula and once they are defanged, they make wonderful pasta, soups and sauces – and this eponymous risotto from Anna Del Conte NP
Liz DiGregorio, newest Cuisinette, retired from a career in emergency management. She bought Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking in 1967 and has been cooking ever since. Her love of Italian food is rooted in her DNA. When not re-arranging her cookbook library, she can be found in the garden, English mystery in hand and plotting her next escape from DC.
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