My mom’s side of the family is Italian. I went vegetarian at thirteen. This could be really good or really bad. On a good day growing up, there were personal lasagnas loaded with veggies, or even my very own batch of eggplant meatballs. On a bad day, it meant the meatballs (and not the eggplant kind) were cooked in the sauce, and me dining on plain noodles. I recently was given a review copy of Fresh Italian Cooking for the New Generation by Alexandra Caspero Lenz of the blog Delish Knowledge. Upon cracking it open, my first thought was this: if only I could travel back in time and hand my thirteen year old self a copy of this, a lot of dinnertime woes could’ve been avoided. Okay, so I’ve actually been sitting on this book, and this particular recipe from the book, for a month or so, not because I wasn’t excited to share it, but because the mushroom ragú is serious comfort food, and I wasn’t sure you guys would be up for that in the middle of August. While there are plenty of recipes that are totally doable for summertime dinners (check out Balsamic and Basil Pasta Salad, Rainbow Peppers with Capellini, or Mediterranean Zucchini Linguine if we hit a few more hot days), I couldn’t resist the idea of juicy wild mushroom sauce over a cozy bed of polenta, regardless of the weather. My instinct was right, because this dish was killer. Everything in the book sounds good to me though. Italian food has so much potential when it comes to plant-based eating, and Alex makes the most of that potential, swapping out meat for healthy ingredients that totally make sense and are way delicious (like mushrooms!). The book has 100 recipes, all vegetarian, and all much healthier than anything I ate growing up (even after going veg). Of those 100 recipes, over 70 are vegan or include vegan modifications, which are generally as simple as using vegan Parmesan cheese or cashew cream, both of which have recipes conveniently provided towards the back of the book.