Nigella Lawson shares her favourite cookbook

Nigella Lawson, stirring up a storm.   (BBC/Charles Birchmore)
Nigella Lawson, stirring up a storm. (BBC/Charles Birchmore)

At the risk of sounding like a terrible journalist, late last year culinary icon Nigella Lawson shared her favourite cookbook with me, and I’ve been – as the Gen Zs say – gatekeeping the information ever since.

Sat in a cosy corner of an east London home (not Nigella’s), where we were about to have lunch in celebration of her collaboration with online supermarket Ocado, I asked the clumsy question: “What’s your most treasured cookbook, if you had to choose one? I know that’s a difficult question – but which is your most battered?”

The answer was an out-of-print tome I’d never come across, and now that I have my hands on a copy, I feel I can share what Lawson told me.

“It is difficult to say, but there’s a book I read very early on – before I even thought I’d become a food writer – which is Anna Del Conte’s Entertaining All’Italiana, which is no longer in print.

Entertaining all’Italiana by Anna Del Conte (Anna Del Conte)
Entertaining all’Italiana by Anna Del Conte (Anna Del Conte)

“A lot of it’s compiled, all the recipes. She’s erudite and has a wonderful mind and a rather dry, almost acerbic wit. But at the same time she’s so practical.

“She was the first person I read who always said how far you could cook things ahead of time and wrote about leftovers – and I learnt from that. Part of writing a recipe is saying what the leftovers can be like.

“There’re so many books I really treasure, but that one goes way back and I adore her.”

After scouring the internet for a good copy for some time, I can report that eBay and Amazon currently have some second-hand versions of the esteemed 98-year-old food writer Del Conte’s book for upwards of £21.18, or Abe Books has copies from between £23.27 and £258.55. Good luck.