Anthony's Sauce Talk, Italian Recipe Discussions" Copyright © 1998-2008 All rights reserved.



Sauce Talk Continued...
Email discussions about Italian recipes. Answers to many questions can be found within these discussions...

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Hi Anthony!
Thank you so much for this wonderful site. I can't wait to make the spaghetti this weekend! I'm having friends and family over for the premier of The Sopranos and am making your sauce, meatballs, and braciole. I have a couple of questions- first , I plan to make a double recipie- anythign I should change or be ready for (other than using a very large pot)? I'm afraid if I make only one recipie there will be a fight over the braciole : ) Also is it acceptable to put the meatballs and braciole togehter the night before then brown and put them in the sauce the next day? I wasn't sure if that would wreck the consitency of the meatballs or anythign (I'm very new to italian cooking). Thanks for the help and for your time-- I will send pictures of us all enjoying it.e. :-)

Katy

Hi Katy,
Auh, the Sopranos is back huh? Cool. Well, hope you have a fabulous time and fabulous food as well :-) If you are going to double the recipe I do not recommend just making it all in one pot. I recommend making the recipe exactly as I have it laid out twice in two pots. Just make the whole thing twice. You will get a much better consistency this way. When it's all done you can then throw everything into one pot. You can prepare the braciole and meatballs the day before if you like, just make sure it's sealed up good and in the fridge. I recommend doing that late the night before so it's not in the fridge too long. Then in the morning you could start making the sauce and then brown your braciole and meatballs and then throw them in the sauce, Yum! I can smell it right now as I type! Be sure to brown the Braciole first, you want them to cook a bit longer than the meatballs and yes, if you don't have enough Broccolis on hand for the crowd there could be fights! I look forward to the pix of the event! I love to see people having fun with the sauce. Remember, what makes Italian cooking taste so good is the love that one pours into the food. So, let the love flow! Have a great time!n.


Ciao,

~8-) Anthony

Hi Anthony,
Here are some pictures of our Soprano's party as promised. People were fighting over the leftovers! I made your lasanga the next week and had to make two recipies so that my parents and aunt (in teh picture with my husband and me) could take it home. Thankyou so much, your site has opened up a whole world of italian cooking that I was too scared to even attempt before. That was my first lasanga, and boy was it good!
Check out the Visitors Photos section of the site to see the photos that Katy sent in. Thanks for the great pix katy!!!

... and click Here for more sauce talk with Katy.


Hi Anthony!
Mama Mia What a wonderful! sauce. I've been looking for a really good sauce recipe for a long time. I even paid $17.95 for a 'famous' sauce recipe from the Internet that included instructions. They claimed it was the best sauce ever,etc. The instructions were nothing like yours and I did not like the sauce at all and only made it once. I was very disappointed. I came on your site by accident and even after reading all the letters from everyone I didn't want to get my hopes up that this one would be any different from that 'famous' sauce. Well Anthony my search is over. I can not thank you enough for this wonderful sauce recipe. How very kind of you to share it for free. You must be a great guy. Tell your mom that she did a great job on you. :-) I agree with the man that wrote that you should write a cookbook. I would definitely buy it even if it only contains the recipes that I already got from your site. All the pictures and details you give are so helpful. I will be trying all of the recipes and am looking forward to any new ones you post. Thank you Thank you Thank you. I have a couple questions. The first is probably a silly question but what do you do with the pork chops that are cooked in the sauce. Do you just eat them or take the meat from the bones and add to the sauce(that's what I did)? And do you use the whole sauce recipe in your lasagna? Those meatballs make great meatball hoagies with cheese on top. Yum! It is also so nice of you to answer all your letters. I can't get over how nice you are. I've read all the letters from everyone that's made your sauce. I love the way that you throw in the Italian grandma secrets. That is so cute and very very helpful. Thanks again AnthonyGod Bless you and your family and those Italian grandmas and mom whose recipes are making so many people happy and better cooks than they've ever been before finding your website. :-)

Sandy

Agatha,
HI! So glad you likes the sauce. I am happy to share it with you. Italian food is all about sharing the love with family and friends, I am happy to share the love. Wow, you read all the letters, that's a lot of reading. Fun reading though, some nice stories in there. I'm having a great time hearing from others about their families and how they enjoyed the sauce, it's all great fun! I like families spending time together, Italian food is great for that! Families sitting around the table having long dinners and actually having conersation with each other is becoming a lost art, very sad thing... I actually do have plans for a cookbook one day, just to busy these days to approach the task. I also plan on making some videos of the whole process, now that will be blast! Just need to find the time. In regards to the pork chop, I usually put them in a bowl with a bit of sauce and serve them as a side dish or as you did, break it up and throw them in the sauce, depends on my mood. I do not use the whole sauce recipe for the Lasagna. You should have about 1/3 of the sauce leftover after making the Lasagna. Grandma secret's are very valuable and as I remember them I try my best to share them. Everyone needs to know the joy of great Italian food. OK, here is another great grandma tip, just came to me. I remember that grandma Salerno used to "always" get a nice fresh block of parmesan cheese and grate it wall into a plate and then put it into jars. The kind of jars that have a plastic ring and latch that seals everything air tight. This is hard work, you have to use the smallest holes on the grater and it real work! Grandma was strong! Really it will take a good 30 minutes+ to grate the parmesan. But, it's always nice to have the "fresh" parmesan with all the meals and the cooking. Really makes a difference. Well, happy cooking! I will have new recipes up soon.


Ciao,

~8-) Anthony


Anthony!,
I my name is Agatha (nice Italian/Sicilian girl!!). I have been making sauce for many of my 52 years and always experimenting different styles and tastes when it comes to my spaghetti sauce. I tried your sauce and have to say that it was simply DELICIOUS! My Sunday crowd felt the same way! Now, I'll have more company..... thanks!! Anyway, thank you for sharing your recipes.... I can't wait to make other meals that you've put on your site! Keep up the great cooking!! I truly enjoy reading your "comments"....it makes cooking worthwhile! Again, thanks!! I'll keep you posted as to your other recipes that I intend to make! Sincerely,

Agatha! Bon Appetite!!!!

Agatha,
Thanks for the kind words. You have been making sauce a long time and for you to like mine that much, well, that's a BIG complement :-) Grandma Salerno would be proud! Have fun with the recipes and defiantly let me know how it all comes out. Happy cooking!!


Ciao,

~8-) Anthony


Hi Anthony,
I just wanted to let you know that I made your sauce and meatballs for my family for our Valentines Day dinner and we just loved it! I also emailed your recipe to several friends just to read through it because it was so funny. I really enjoyed reading through and making everything, you did such a great job. I loved the way you explained everything, and it was a whole new experience for me even though I've been married for nearly 25 years and consider myself a proficient cook. I just wanted to say "Thanks"! I felt Italian for a day! Yours Truly,!

Karen Augustyn

Hi Karen,
Nice to hear you had a lovely Italian Valentine's day :-) Glad you enjoyed the recipe. Share the love is
what I say! Italian cooking is not really just cooking, it's an event! I'm glad to share this piece of my family history with you. I still remember how much work my grandmother did when it came to cooking on Sunday afternoons. I think, "in my memory" every time I saw here she was in the kitchen! Hard work, cooking Italian food for big families! Well, happy cooking!!

Ciao,

~8-) Anthony


Dearest Anthony,
First I want to commend you on your awesome authentic recipes.. I am 50% Sicilian and 50% french but I tell everyone I am Italian one because I am proud of that and two because I look 100% Italian.. Anyhow, I have made many of your recipes and NEVER have I been disappointed!! I tell everyone about your website and MANY of them use your recipes all the time as I do. I have made your recipes our family favorites.. So thank you for all your dedication to simplifying each step. I know you have worked HOURS trying to make this enjoyable to anyone whom makes your recipes. You just can not go wrong with how easy you have made it with the step by step directions and the grocery list. You literally took all the guess work out for us. Thank you.. I am emailing you because I have made your sauce (which is the best I have ever had) several times but the only problem I am having is the acidity of it.. I use sugar as you say but it is still way too tangy for our liking. How would you recommend that I fix this? I have a friend whom is also Italian and her mom said to put one fennel seed and that will take care of the problem.. I was worried it would change the taste of the sauce but she swears it does not since it is only one seed. What is your thought on this and do you have any suggestions for me? Thank you for your time and God Bless you and your family..... You have the best website for Italian food..I have been to thousands and no body holds a candle to yours..Thank you from our family to yours!!

Sincerely, Tara Applegate

Tara,
Thank you for the kind words about my labor of love, the sauce site. I do have great fun with it. The
best part of the site is all the nice emails I get and all the great discussion about Italian food. Every email gets me hungry ;-) Too tangy huh? Hmmmmm.... Well the fennel might do it. But you would need more than one seed. Throw in about 1/4 tsp of seeds, or better yet cook the sauce with sausage too! Same recipe with the meatballs, but you add Italian sausage as well. If you use sausage don't add the fennel because there is fennel in the sausage. Also if you are using sweet basil, use less. Offset what you don't use of the sweet basil with oregano, or also try using just basil, not sweet basil. The tanginess your are tasting might be from the sweet basil. I kind of like that taste so it does not seem tangy to me. You "might" want to try different tomatoes as well. What brand are you using for the diced tomatoes? Well, I've been meaning to add this to the site... :-) I just threw up a little photo gallery of the sausage preparation process involved to add the sausage to the sauce. You will see in the photos that I actually boil the sausage in water right in the frying pan. Fill the pan up with water, just enough to almost cover the sausage. Then cook on high being careful to keep flipping the sausage. be sure to stab the sausage several times with a fork during cooking. CAREFUL, they squirt! You cook the sausage in this manner until all the water is cooking down and you are left with just the sausage frying in the pan, at this point, you keep cooking to get them nice and browned, even a little black in places, this is ok. Then you throw them in the sauce with the meatballs. Here is a link to the sausage photo gallery. You will be the very first to view the sausage photo gallery ;-) Hey, if you think of it or feel so inspired..... I need more photos for the visitors photo page. I just love putting up photos of people having fun with the recipes, great fun! :-) No pressure ;-) I hope this helps!

Ciao,

~8-) Anthony

Click Here for more sauce talk with Tara.


Hi there!
I hope that this message gets into the hands of the person who wrote the recipes. Very impressive. I absolutely love the way you explain and direct how to make your dishes..from the sauces to the Italian garlic bread recipe.Your photo gallery is excellent.I am not Italian, but swear somewhere in my genetics there MUST be some Italian in me, because I love, love, love Italian food, GARLIC and cooking for my family and friends! Your site is SUPERB!! We're having a pasta fund raiser next month. I want to make delicious sauce and think I'll use your recipe. Thank you!

Katherine,

Hi Katherine,
Hi! I'm sure there must be Italian blood in your body somewhere since you have the love for the Nice Itaiano food! Oh the Garlic! :-) Glad you enjoy the site. It's a labor of love. I do have a passion for Italian cooking which I picked up from my Grandmom, mom, mother in-law, Uncles, Aunts so on etc... Food was a very big part of my childhood and in particular, Italian food, the best on the planet in my opinion, but then I am a bit bias ;-) Anyway, hope you do end up making the lovely sauce, meatballs and braciole! Have fun with the recipes and let me know how it all comes out if you do make the sauce for the fund raiser and my you raise much for the cause! If you need to make a lot of sauce, work your way through the sauce talk section of my site, there are a few discussion there in those pages about making a lot of sauce! The key is to not just double or triple the recipe, what you will want to do is make the recipe as written out 2 or 3 times or as much as you need to meat the amount required. The recipe as written out feeds 8 people comfortably with some sauce leftover for saving. It can feed 10 people with no room to spare, but that could be stretching it if you have big eaters in the bunch.


Ciao,

~8-) Anthony


Hi Anthony!
I am amazed at how good your sauce was. We are all still talking about it. I want to make everything on
the site now. Happy Valentine's Day to a wonderful cook and a great human being who has made a great dent in the world with his recipes.

Suzan ~ Coming to you from Portland, MN!

Suzan,
And a happy Valentines day to you too! So glad the sauce came out well. The only mystery behind it all
are the steps you take and the amount of this and that. You see, there are not many who share grandma's sauce, not sure why. I believe in sharing the love :-) Happy cooking!!

Ciao,

~8-) Anthony


Anthony,
I have been telling all of my peeps about your site. This is the most comprehensive recipe site I have
found. You give the shopping list, wine suggestions, even great music to set the theme, and loads of pictures to guide us through this wonderful process. I have been trying to perfect my own sauce or RED GRAVY (as we used to say in the South) for over 30 years, but your families secrets and methods have taken this blonde Dane into a whole new level. (The Italian Level) of saucery!! We live North of Chicago and I decided to make a small party out of this recipe one evening. I spent the whole day chopping,mixing and stirring and when my sister and brother-in-law came home from work and my girlfriend came over we spent the whole evening eating and lauging and dancing to the music. I doubled the recipe to have plenty to freeze, and I must admit I had to do a few variations on your theme but the end result was simply awesome. I mixed ground sausage and ground chuck and browned it and didn't make the meatballs (sorry)(next time I will follow your recipe to a tee) All I had was wheat french bread but it turned out to be the best garlic bread I have EVER tasted!! A week later I thawed some of the sauce and made your lasagne (absolutely KILLER!!!) I can't thank you enough for building this site. All the best to you and yours! Peace Love and RED GRAVY. CHOW,

William P., Scott, Ann and Angie.


Hey William,
I Hi! Thanks for the great PiX :-) Sorry, just now getting back to your email. I've been swamped at work!
Gasping for air, mechanical engineering, ugh, it's all about deadlines. So, looks like you had fun with the sauce? I am please that I could help you get to a new level of saucery. Thanks for the kind words about the site. It is a labor of love and I have so many more recipes I want to get up on the site. Just takes a lot of effort to get them all written down. It's hard when you have been taught to just put in some if this and some of that and taste and then put some more and you just know when it's right. So to actually write down measurements and all the appropriate steps can be a daunting task. Auh but the love that is behind the food! It must be shared. I am glad to share it with you. And oh yes, the lovely Italiano music, it does add to the whole experience. The smells and the sounds together always takes me way back in time to a much simpler place of the family being together and love abounding! Wonderful! Yeah, that lasagna is killer isn't it? Well, happy cooking. I am working on your photo's now and will have them implemented into the site soon. My favorite pic is with you and the wine and the nice salads and the lasagna all ready to go. Nice! Makes me hungry, pour me a glass please, I'll be right over. I will let you know when your pic's are up on the site. When I am done, you will have you own dedicated page on my site, so if you ever feel like sending more photos, feel free, it will be easy after that because you will already have an established page on the site. Have a fantastic day.

Ciao,

~8-) Anthony


Good Morning Anthony,
I have been online for some time now, and came across your site. I have TRIED to make the "perfect" sauce
and EVERYTIME it does not taste good. I found a recipe where I bought tomatoes and did the whole thing fresh, and simmered all day which my kids LOVED because it had a sweet taste to it, but my husband hated. I will try to make this on Sunday for my family. Can you give me a little hint on what else you think may be good in this sauce??? Thank You!

Michele

P.S LOVE your site, you are tooo funny..........

Michele,
What I have spelled out on the site is the only thing I put in the sauce. The one thing I do add from time to time is some Italian Sausage. You brown it just like the meatballs. However the difference is you fill a frying pan up with water, enough to cover the sausage almost completely. Then you cook it on med-high letting the water boil and burn off slowly, you flip the sausage around as it's cooking, this takes about 30 minute or so, you just keep cooking until the water is all gone then you brown in same pan and throw it in the sauce. I have pictures of the sausage process somewhere, glad you reminded me about this. I have to get it up on the site. Have fun cooking, let me know how it all comes out. I need more photos for the visitors photo page. So feel free to take photos of your culinary experience, would love to get some more photos. Great fun seeing people have fun with the sauce, especially families :-) Ciao,.. Have a fantastic day.

Oh wait.. One moment... Going to look for those sausage browning photos now.. If I find them I will attach then to this email.... Aarrg... Must have them on the home computer. Oh well. I tried. I will get those up on the sight soon.

Ciao,

~8-) Anthony

Anthony,
OK, I just read all your comments and printed off everything that I need to embark on this NEW recipe. I love your site.... WONDERFUL... I will make this on Sunday for my family and I will email your site on Monday...... I also really like how you step by step teach us how to do this. My mom passed away early before I could get a chance to learn her way of cooking. Thanks a lot!

Michele


Note: This is a long one and you have to follow along very carefully...

Anthony,
Recently a local food consultant made a statement in our local newspaper which I found..well, odd. The statement was (is) ..."Spaghetti and meatballs-there is nowhere in Italy where that exists." As far as I know, my bloodline is 100% Italian. My grandparents (all 4) emigrated from Bisceglia (father's folks) and Naples (mother's folks)in the 1920s, to the Greater Boston area. My parents (1st generation Italian Americans)grew up with a basic staple of Italian cooking and raised me and my brothers in the 1950s and 1960s on the foods that were brought over from Italy in the 1920s. Spaghetti and meatballs and braciole was a standard meal on Sundays. They had it as a standard meal on Sundays in the 1930s and 1940s as well. I would like to make a correction to the statement made by our local food consultant, but I don't have positive proof that there are current, or past, recipes in Italy that included both spaghetti and meatballs. I have consulted my parents on this, but they can get no more specific than "Of course it's from Italy, are you crazy?". Well, I'm not, but I can't really go to the local food consultant with that as my counter point to the statement alleging that spaghetti and meatballs are not found in Italy. Can you offer any advice, references that I can view on line, or other location to go in order to further my case for a correction to our food consultant? Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks

Paul J. Rana ~ Bigfork, MT

Hi Paul,
Sorry just now getting back to you on this. I have been totally swamped with work and very backed up with email. I have been getting a few emails on this very subject of the history behind Spaghetti Sauce and Meatballs. Very interesting! I have been doing some investigating myself on this. I am finding out a lot about my family history in the process :-) Below I have placed some on going correspondence between a visitor of my site that had the same questions as you. I got my mom into the conversation too! :-) Well, turns out I have this cousin Gus that has done a lot of work with the family tree investigating stuff and he also wrote a book about Ellis Island where all the Italian immigrants had to go before they came into America a while back. Well.... read more about it below. Some very interesting stuff. There will be more to come on this so I will try to keep you in the loop on our conversations. happy Cooking!
Ciao,

~8-) Anthony

Anthony,
You have a wonderful site! The sauce I make is very similar to yours, with the exception that we use sausage instead of pork chops, and sometimes (when making for myself, cuz I don't like sausage) I just put in several fennel seeds for the flavor. (That should work for the person on your Sauce Talks section who wanted to eliminate the pork for her Jewish friends.) Recently, I have started to use cans of crushed tomatoes instead of puree, and the result is amazing! I cannot wait until I have some time to try your Ratatouille and Eggplant Parmasan. My Sicilian Great-Grandma Milone came to Pickfaux, Louisiana from Palermo, Sicily in 1911 with her familiy when she was only two. She is where we got our method of preparing our family's sauce and meatballs, but, alas, she passed away when I was only 11, and I never got to ask her many of the questions I have.

Really, the reason I write is because I was trying to find out a little on the history of the origination of spaghetti and meatballs, as we know them now, cooked together. I think your mom's mom may have possibly derived her methods from the same roots as my Great-Grandma Milone (Tortorice), and was hoping you may know how the recipe came to be as we know it. I have done a little research, and, from what I gather, pasta with a tomato and meat sauce was made popular by Italian-Americans from Sicily & Naples in the United States between the late 1800's and World War II to satisfy an American craving for red meat... Do you know where your family developed thier methods of preparation? Sincerely,

Sarah Morini

Hi Sarah,
Sorry for delay in response. I have been swamped with work. Glad you enjoyed the site. It's a labor of love! :-) I am looking into the history on this now. Coordinating with my mom. My mom said she is forwarding your email onto my cousin Gus, who was very good friend with my grandmother and new my great grandmother as well. Gus also has written a book about Ellis island and all the Italian immigrants that came through that Island, my grandmother being one of them. He has also done extensive work on My mom's family tree (The "Salerno" side). So, anyway, when I hear back from Gus we should have some really good information on this :-) from WHAT I REMEMBER, My grandma Salerno came over here when she was ABOUT 9 years old and she learned all her cooking from her Mom who lived in Italy all her life. She learned how to make the Spaghetti Sauce and Meatballs from her mom whole lived in Italy. I'm thinking that this is a traditional meal that they actually made in Italy, but I'm foggy on the details of how my grandmother came here. If her mom, my great grandmother came to America with her then she could have picked up the recipe here and my grandmother learned how to cook this from her mom when she was here in America. I'm hoping cousin Gus can shed some light on this subject. More of the story to come I hope.

Ciao,

~8-) Anthony

P.S. If you ever write something official up on the subject of the History of Spaghetti Sauce and Meatballs I would love to be able to throw it up on my site or link to it somewhere. Let me know if you ever write something about this subject. You have me interested in it now as well. I always just took it for granted that it was an authentic traditional Italian meal.

P.S.S Here is a little interesting note I just read on this site:
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=473476

Trivia; Did you know?
Pasta existed for thousands of years before anyone ever thought to put tomato sauce on it. The Spanish explorer Cortez brought tomatoes back to Europe from South America in 1519. Even then, almost two centuries passed before spaghetti with tomato sauce made its way into Italian kitchens. Talking about spaghetti and meatballs: the Italians ate meat only a few times a month. When they arrived in America, where meat was so plentiful, they incorporated meat into their cooking more often, making meatballs an American invention. The first American pasta factory was opened in Brooklyn, New York, in 1848, by a Frenchman named Antoine Zerega. Mr. Zerega managed the entire operation with just one horse in his basement to power the machinery. To dry his spaghetti, he placed strands of the pasta on the roof to dry in the sunshine. The stuff that makes tomatoes red may possibly aid n reducing the risk of prostate cancer. In a study from 1986 to 1998, evidence was found in men who ate a diet rich in "tomato sauce, ketchup or other tomato-based products containing the powerful antioxidant known as lycopene were up to one third less likely to develop the disease."

Click here for more follow-up email on this very interesting subject of Spaghetti Sauce and Meatballs history. There was much more correspondence on this subject!


Hi Anthony,
I want to thank you for the amazing recipe! Not only did I think it was the best I have ever had, but the guys at the station (Ambulance) loved it also. Everyone thought that I was a gourmet cook, little do they know, I really have no clue what I am doing. I also made sure to give you credit, but I could not give you enough!!! I am very greatfull that you are so kind to take the time to have that site. By the way, you were definitely right about the fingers smelling like garlic..... I think the smell lasted for days!!!! Take care, and let me know if you have any more wonderful recipes that I could try.
!

Jamie G.

Jamie,
Glad to hear it came out wonderful! :-) Tell the guys at the station Anthony says "mangilo tutto"!!!! (Eat it All) :-) The Italian way is to always have at least two platefuls. With that garlic on your fingers, you had that very special grandma smell. My wife has a funny story about the garlic on the fingers. My mother in-law is in her 80's and is a great cook! She is Sicilian and always cooking up some yummy Italian dish and she is always using garlic. Well my wife has 7 siblings, she being the youngest of the batch. My wife and all her sisters and brothers loved their mom's salad! But when they tried to make the same salad, they could never get it quite right, it would never taste quite the same. Finally they figured it out! You see, my mother in-law (Rose), she always mixed the salad with her hands, she would use a nice balsamic vinegar and olive oil and then just mix it with her hands, well her hands where saturated in garlic most of the time so there was always a hint of garlic added to the dressing! So that was the missing ingredient. Ha! Ha! So now they know, get garlic on your fingers before you make the salad. ~ Happy Cooking.


Ciao,

~8-) Anthony

Anthony ~ One more thing...
The recipe you put up sounds amazing and I can't wait to make it for my family. I was just wondering how many servings it makes. Thank you again for your help, this is amazing.

Jamie G.

Jamie,
If you make the Sauce, Meatballs and Braciole for one big meal, you can serve about 10 with a little room to spare but not much more than than. I have found it's a perfect recipe for 8 people. If you have more then I recommend making the sauce twice as written out. Have fun with the recipe. If you do make it, be sure to let me know how it all came out. Happy Cooking!

Ciao,

~8-) Anthony


Anthony ~ To Good To Be True!
OK, let me first say this. I Love Italian Food!, Pasta I can eat pretty much every day, and the different kind of recipes for pasta dishes just don't run out. My favorite being Spaghetti and Meatballs. Now let me stop here and explain that I'm a VERY Picky eater, and the meat has to taste just right for me. Well, beat me with a string of spaghetti, but today I thought I'd make a quick pasta dish for lunch and return to my usual work. I get online, look up a Spaghetti recipe and happen upon your site. To make a long story short, I've spent he last two hours shopping for groceries, prepping food (all the while listening to the wonderful Italian music from your download area) and cooking up a dish so awesome I can't even describe how happy I am about it. ( Hold on, gotta stir the sauce) Glad I checked that cause the meatballs where ready for the sauce. So now my meatballs are in this delicious sauce, just waiting for my wife and I to enjoy. She'll be home in a few hours, and until then this awesome dish will be slowly cooking to perfection. I just want to thank you and tell you that this is the best S&M ( Spaghetti & Meatballs) recipe I have found so far, and a really big thanks to the music, because I felt like I was in the old country while preparing it, ( which made me very happy). I'll be passing your site on to as much as I can. ~ Best regards

Denni Thorsten Amesn.

Denni,
So glad you like-a da site :-) It's a labor of love of which I am more than happy to share with you. Seems I have interrupted your work today. Oh well.. When one gets good Italian music cranked up, the sauce brewing, the smells, the sounds... Auh, who needs to work anyway! Manja!!!!!!!! EnJoY! "I'm glad your stirring the sauce, this means you are pouring love into the sauce, you are taking care to make a perfect sauce, this is oh so important!" I hope all goes well when the wife gets home. May love abound! Good Italian food (and music) is wonderful for this :-) ~ Now be sure to eat at least two plates... I remember when I was a kid at my grandma's house, if I ate only one plate, she would say "Whadsa-matta-fa-u, you know like-a my cooking? One plate? Your gonna starve, have-a some more!" Who could resist at that point ;-) Have-a some for me! !

Ciao,

~8-) Anthony

Anthony,
Your Spaghetti & Meatballs recipe was a complete hit. The lil wife was quite impressed and dinner with chianti and italian music was great to split up the work-week. Again, thanks and I'll definitely pass this info around. cheers! Sincerely

Denni T. Ameson


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