Angela
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A lot of people know about panettone, which is very available here in the U.S. (the versions sent to foreign countries are from "altered" recipes, imo. They're way, way too sweet. I may have to make my own, as my mother did. In those days, she baked them in old coffee cans. She must have given away dozens.)
"In Milan it’s all about the panettone, literally 'pan de toni' or Toni’s bread. Legend has it that Toni was the kitchen hand at the court of Ludovic Sforza, Duke of Milan. He burnt the cakes for dinner so threw together a type of medieval spiced bread and presented it at court. The court loved it and the panettone was born.
There are others, however: Panettone basso from Torino, Panone from Bologna, Pandolce Genovese etc.
"In Liguria there’s the pandolce genovese, a fruit bread that can be made tall and airy or flat and crumbly. Bice Comparato, 93, from Albenga on the Gulf of Genoa, recalls how “we used to collect grapes from the vegetable garden and dry them, and my mother would use these in the pandolce. We’d also collect figs that we’d dry out on netting and conserve them in fresh fig leaves that we’d sew up. At Christmas you’d open them and inside there was the dried fig.”The pine nuts that feature in Genovese pesto also feature in its Christmas cake. “The pine nut is the pine nut. It turns up everywhere,” Bice’s daughter, Brunella Parodi, tells me. "
There's also panforte of Siena, not my personal favorite.
Then there are the biscuits: ricciarelli from Toscana, and many from Puglia:
"In Puglia, the emphasis is on the biscuits. Giuseppina Maiorano, 85, from Lizzano in the province of Taranto, tells me they’d start making them after the Feast of the Immaculate Conception on December 8th.
“There were almond biscuits, ones with wine, and ones with oil and pepper are delicious. And we’d make pettole, fried pieces of dough with honey, and purcidduzzi, little balls of dough that were fried and then dipped in honey. We’d start eating at lunchtime on Christmas Eve – usually pasta with baccalà – and carry on until about ten in the evening."
It wouldn't be complete without strufoli. They sell them everywhere here. Too sweet for me, but they remind my husband of Christmas so I usually buy one.
Panettone:
Panone of Bologna:
What's in a name, right? It's fruitcake.
Pandolce di Genova:
Alto:
Basso:
This is a lot like German stollen, which I LOVE, and buy every Christmas. Sometimes, twice, once for us and once for guests.
Panforte: Siena
I just LOVE Ricciarelli:
I always include them in my massive Christmas cookie bake, which starts tomorrow.
From Puglia:
Purceddi in vin cotto:
Also from Puglia not mentioned in the article: crepes filled with sweet ricotta. I don't know if they're served at Christmas, though.
Bocconotti Calabresi: they're typically filled with jam, but I know someone who fills them with Nutella.
Strufoli:
My favorite cookie, anytime, anyplace:
Kudos to "Italy, the Local" for the idea.
https://www.thelocal.it/20181206/italy-christmas-cakes-biscuits
"In Milan it’s all about the panettone, literally 'pan de toni' or Toni’s bread. Legend has it that Toni was the kitchen hand at the court of Ludovic Sforza, Duke of Milan. He burnt the cakes for dinner so threw together a type of medieval spiced bread and presented it at court. The court loved it and the panettone was born.
There are others, however: Panettone basso from Torino, Panone from Bologna, Pandolce Genovese etc.
"In Liguria there’s the pandolce genovese, a fruit bread that can be made tall and airy or flat and crumbly. Bice Comparato, 93, from Albenga on the Gulf of Genoa, recalls how “we used to collect grapes from the vegetable garden and dry them, and my mother would use these in the pandolce. We’d also collect figs that we’d dry out on netting and conserve them in fresh fig leaves that we’d sew up. At Christmas you’d open them and inside there was the dried fig.”The pine nuts that feature in Genovese pesto also feature in its Christmas cake. “The pine nut is the pine nut. It turns up everywhere,” Bice’s daughter, Brunella Parodi, tells me. "
There's also panforte of Siena, not my personal favorite.
Then there are the biscuits: ricciarelli from Toscana, and many from Puglia:
"In Puglia, the emphasis is on the biscuits. Giuseppina Maiorano, 85, from Lizzano in the province of Taranto, tells me they’d start making them after the Feast of the Immaculate Conception on December 8th.
“There were almond biscuits, ones with wine, and ones with oil and pepper are delicious. And we’d make pettole, fried pieces of dough with honey, and purcidduzzi, little balls of dough that were fried and then dipped in honey. We’d start eating at lunchtime on Christmas Eve – usually pasta with baccalà – and carry on until about ten in the evening."
It wouldn't be complete without strufoli. They sell them everywhere here. Too sweet for me, but they remind my husband of Christmas so I usually buy one.
Panettone:
Panone of Bologna:
What's in a name, right? It's fruitcake.
Pandolce di Genova:
Alto:
Basso:
This is a lot like German stollen, which I LOVE, and buy every Christmas. Sometimes, twice, once for us and once for guests.
Panforte: Siena
I just LOVE Ricciarelli:
I always include them in my massive Christmas cookie bake, which starts tomorrow.
From Puglia:
Purceddi in vin cotto:
Also from Puglia not mentioned in the article: crepes filled with sweet ricotta. I don't know if they're served at Christmas, though.
Bocconotti Calabresi: they're typically filled with jam, but I know someone who fills them with Nutella.
Strufoli:
My favorite cookie, anytime, anyplace:
Kudos to "Italy, the Local" for the idea.
https://www.thelocal.it/20181206/italy-christmas-cakes-biscuits