Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

READING NOOK

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Not many people would do a double-take when invited to happy hour. The custom of getting tipsy on discounted drinks, often while nibbling fried food, is solidly American — and dates back to Prohibitio­n.

Swap the term “happy hour” with aperitivo, however, and you might elicit a blank stare.

Yet aperitivo, happy hour’s spiritual ancestor, is creeping back into vogue. The custom can be traced back to Italy in the late 18th century, when a Turin distiller named Antonio Benedetto Carpano steeped herbs in wine to create vermouth. In doing so, he jump-started a ritual of sipping bitterswee­t drinks (as well as eating snacks) before dinner that still persists across Italy.

So notes Kay Plunkett-Hogge in the book Aperitivo: Drinks and Snacks

for the Dolce Vita (Mitchell Beazley, 2017), one of the excellent food and drink books published this year, which cinches together notes on vermouth, Campari and bitterswee­t cocktail with recipes for pre-dinner nibbles such as Calabrian deviled eggs with ’nduja sausage and pancetta.

The book is part of an aperitivo zeitgeist. The pre-dinner custom (as well as its French counterpar­t, apero) has been trending on social media, and light, fizzy aperitivo cocktails are multiplyin­g across drinks menus — even if the concept founders slightly in the United States, where we tend to eat dinner pretty early, and soon after we get home.

Grabbing an hour to chill with a glass of sparkling wine or aperitif before dinner may seem indulgent, but gets the digestive juices flowing and is a ritual that deserves to persist past the holidays. — Corin Hirsch (Newsday/TNS)

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