This book, with color illustrations, was not conceived as an attempt to collect every Italian recipe, nor as an exercise in refinement, reinvention, or personal interpretation.It was born instead from a deliberate choice: to tell the story of Italian cuisine in its most authentic, everyday, and recognizable form - the kind that belongs to homes long before it reaches restaurants.The recipes gathered here were not selected for media fame, technical complexity, or visual spectacle.They were chosen because they are deeply rooted in a specific place, passed down through gesture and memory, capable of evoking a region even without naming it.Every dish in this book follows a precise criterion: it is not an author's creation, but a collective construction, shaped over time by generations of domestic kitchens.This is a cuisine built on simple, often humble ingredients, governed by intelligence, restraint, and respect rather than excess.You will not find "reinterpretations" here, nor modern shortcuts.What you will find instead are: times that must be respectedtextures that must be recognizedcommon mistakes that must be avoidedsmall gestures that make all the differenceBecause traditional Italian cooking is not easy - it is exact.Its difficulty does not lie in visual complexity, but in the quiet discipline it demands.This book does not claim to be an encyclopedia.It does not seek to exhaust every territory, nor to list everything that exists.It chooses instead to present fewer dishes, told in full, restoring their context, seasonality, social role, and memory.The geographical order - from the North down through the South, to the islands - is not merely physical, but cultural.Along this path emerge climates, scarcities, abundances, seas, and mountains that shaped ways of eating long before they shaped taste.Each recipe is accompanied by a careful description of both preparation and tasting, because eating is not merely nourishment, but an act of recognition.Flavor, aroma, and texture are as much a part of culture as the ingredients themselves.This book is dedicated to those who believe that traditional cuisine does not need to be rescued, but listened to.To those who know that a dish, when done properly, does not ask for explanation, but for respect.If these recipes continue to be cooked, then they will not have been merely recorded.They will have remained alive.