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4 minute read
In the Kitchen
Cooking with Amy: “It’s all good” Gustare la cucina—the Italian phrase for “enjoy cooking” heartily describes this Villages grandmother who dreams about cooking and loves being in the kitchen.
STORY: THERESA CAMPBELL // PHOTOS: FRED LOPEZ
“Cooking is defi nitely my passion,” says Amelia “Amy” Landi Lednak, 81. “It’s what I do. I cook from morning to night every day. I love making different things. Sometimes I don’t sleep thinking about it. I’m so excited waiting for the next day to come. I can’t wait to get up and cook!”
She cherished learning how to make homemade pasta, sauce, and meatballs from her mother and grandma who immigrated from Italy.
“I can remember as a little girl helping my mother make Italian cookies at Christmastime. Mother did a lot of one-pot meals and soups,” Amy says, recalling as a teenager, she ventured into making fancier meals, like Duck a l’Orange, which didn’t go over well with her father. He took the duck to the kitchen sink to rinse off the orange glaze.
Amy now cherishes cooking for her husband Dick of 62 years and their Villages friends, so it’s not unusual for her to cook a spread—mostly foods from the 400-plus recipes featured in her cookbook, “It’s All Good: A Cookbook for Friends and Family.”
It was out of demand that the cookbook came about.
“The kids would call me all the time asking, ‘Mom, how do you make this dish?’ The cookbook was only meant to be for my children and a few close friends,” she says. Initially, 10 cookbooks were printed. Currently, more than 400 copies have been sold.
“I had one woman call me and she said, ‘I bought the book and I don’t really cook, but I took it to bed with me and read it like a novel, and it’s the best read I have had in a long time!’”
Amy has a book-signing coming at Barnes & Noble in The Villages in the spring with other authors. The date is yet to be determined. “Now I’m getting calls from people who want me to write another cookbook,” she says.
She looks forward to planning meals around meats and fresh vegetables on sale. “Publix and The Fresh Market know me on a fi rstname basis,” she says. “When shopping, I
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—AMY LANDI LEDNAK shop the perimeter of the store, that is where everything fresh is. Anything in a box has sugar, carbs, and it’s processed and it’s going to be lousy for you. Shop the perimeter.”
Friends have told Amy that her dishes are a special treat, including when she made sauerkraut with a special touch. “That sauerkraut was the best sauerkraut I have ever tasted”—a compliment Amy heard from a retired Jewish attorney. “He said, ‘I fi nally fi gured out why yours is so much better—it had a lot of love in it.’”
“And it also had a lot of gin in it,” she laughingly told him. “The secret is I cook my sauerkraut in gin. It makes it so good. I use half water, half gin and with a pork roast in it, it’s absolutely fabulous.”
Amy says she’s blessed that her husband
s often follows her in the kitchen to wash pots as she cooks, but she remembers the time when Dick felt she was spending too much money at the grocery store and overdoing it in the kitchen.
“He hounded me. I fi nally broke down in tears and said, ‘You know what Dick? It’s the only thing I do. I cook really good and you want to take that away from me?’ Finally, somebody told him this is my passion. I am the happiest when I am cooking. I could be in the worst mood, I could have the worst thing happen, and when something bad happens, I’ll cook. I don’t care what it is, who it is for, I will cook,” Amy says. “That’s what I do. I love to cook.”
Amy can be reached at 352.430.3070 for those who want a copy of her cookbook.
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Shrimp in ginger butter sauce
Ingredients:
6 ounces of large shrimp in shell, peeled 2 tablespoons unsalted butter 1½ teaspoons grated peeled ginger 2 tablespoons medium-dry sherry 2 tablespoons coarsely chopped cilantro
Pat shrimp dry and season with salt.
Directions:
Heat butter in a heavy medium skillet over medium-high heat until foam subsides, then sauté 2 minutes. Add sherry and sauté ginger 30 seconds. Add shrimp and sauté 2 minutes. Add sherry and sauté until shrimp are just cooked through, 1 to 2 minutes. Stir in cilantro and season with salt and pepper. Serves 1.