Tag: biscuit

The ladyfingers: the ancient origins of the Savoy biscuit – Italian Cuisine

191308


As in a theater, the scene opens with three protagonists: a huge cake, a count and an emperor. The first is called "gateau or biscuit de Savoie", the second is Amedeo VI (also from Savoy) and the third is Charles of Luxembourg or Charles IV.

191308The origins
It is said that the Count, in formal dress and on horseback, he offered the distinguished guest a huge cake depicting the castle of Chambery surrounded by a crown of snow-capped mountains with the imperial diadem on top. When this happened is a little less clear. It could have been the 1348 when the count, little more than a child, hosted Charles of Luxembourg, then a pretender to the crown and passing through Savoy, who later became emperor (1355), would have remembered that act of vassalage. Or later, in the 1365, to seal the bond with the Empire and to thank Charles IV who in that year appointed Amedeo VI imperial vicar, thus opening up to the Savoy a path that will lead them first to become dukes and then kings. The fact is that the two stories, that of the Savoy dynasty and that of the gateau or biscuit, have always been inextricably linked and the characteristic spongy dough based on "eggs, sugar and flour", better known as Savoyard pasta, has kept two versions, one in France and one more famous in Piedmont.

The Piedmontese Savoyard
Here it has become the Savoyard known to all: crumbly, light and nutritious, once the prerogative, or better still the official biscuit (we would say today) of the small heirs of the House of Savoy. The dough improves and evolves starting from the 1700s, allowing the biscuit its current fame: the pastry chefs discover that, by dividing the yolks from the whites and then whipping and combining them separately with the rest of the ingredients, the dough takes on a more airy appearance. The recipe thus updated comes also transcribed by Alexandre Dumas, not only a novelist but also a fine gastronomist, in his Grand Dictionnaire de la cuisine (1873) which mentions both the Savoy biscuit (to be prepared with 12 eggs), and the ladyfingers which he suggests making with a lighter dough with the same quantities of sugar, flour and starch as his cousin from beyond the Alps but with 16 eggs.

The Sardinian, Molise, Ligurian and Sicilian version
The Savoyards follow the Savoy dynasty wherever it goes and thus spread into Sardinia with a variant that includes fewer eggs: the biscuits of Fonni long and slender while i pistoccus wider and shorter. They take the name of pre-made in Molise And corporals in Liguria. In Sicily the biscuits arrived during the first Savoy domination (1713 – 1720), reinterpreted by the island's pastry chefs with even fewer eggs than the Sardinian version. In the Trapani area they become saviarda, in Caltanissetta raffioli, biscuttina in the ennese area and firrincuozzu in other parts. A century later, the Marquis Vincenzo Mortillaro describes the Sicilian variant as: "small pieces of sweet and very tender dough made of flour, eggs and sugar that are eaten as dry as they are soaked in chocolate, wine or other spirits and are given even to children when they spoil ". They have now become famous, Cavour also likes them who is greedy for it; but they are so Savoy, for better or for worse, that Giuseppe Tommasi da Lampedusa, in The Leopard, makes Don Ciccio Tumeo say, suspended between the memory of the old Bourbon regime and the dawn of the unification of Italy under the Savoy: "now all Savoiardi are! But I, the Savoiardi, I eat them with coffee, me! And holding a dummy biscuit between thumb and forefinger, he dips it into an imaginary cup ".

Laura Maragliano
in Sale & Pepe of October 2021

Niko Romito's super biscuit from today in Milan – Italian Cuisine


From 5 December 2020 to 6 January 2021, in the beautiful residential area of ​​Piazza Risorgimento in Milan, between Porta Venezia and Porta Romana, the Niko Laboratory Romito opens a window with many delicious news that the Chef presents in preview for Christmas 2020.

"Finally here we are" the chef tells us “The super biscuit is exactly how I wanted it: good, greedy and at the same time light and healthy. I believe that this simple biscuit and the whole line we are presenting today fully represent my idea of ​​the evolution of the kitchen, of the whole kitchen. I have always seen simplicity as a point of arrival, as the understandable and recognizable result of processes of research, study, tests and a physiological alternation of failures and successes.

Simplicity is the great luxury of contemporary gastronomy, as I see it, luxury is eating a chocolate biscuit knowing that it is good for me, recognizing that taste that is sedimented in the memory of childhood, which refers to tradition and memories but which lives in the present updated by technology and innovation.

I like to define my research laboratory as the "scientific workshop" of my kitchens which become its creative expression.
The Niko Romito line that debuts today, certified organic and vegan, starts from the great classics of the Italian confectionery tradition: jam, chocolate cream, biscuits and fruit juices have always been the real stars of breakfasts and snacks for all of us and I wanted these products to act as standard gastronomic journey that has taste and health as its destination.

See you in Milan, in Piazza Risorgimento 3, where we opened a window in my workshop in Castel di Sangro, to bring a preview of the line to the city for this somewhat special Christmas. "

A temporary shop that becomes the Milanese showcase of Niko's research, pastry and bakery laboratory Romito which is based in the chef's headquarters in Abruzzo. For a month, a careful selection of new products together with the famous Panettone and PANDOLCE, the Chef's latest baked dessert, will be available for purchase in the shop in Piazza Risorgimento 3.

the gluten-free biscuit good for everyone – Italian Cuisine


Light, crumbly and greedy: here's how to prepare these gluten free cookies that will create addiction even in those who do not have intolerance problems

THE cornmeal and hazelnut biscuits are prepared with a flour mix very different from each other, which give rise to an incredibly light and fragrant dough, due to the different consistency of the ingredients used. The addition of the flour derived from chopped hazelnuts instead gives an intriguing scent and texture, which makes these cornmeal and hazelnut biscuits the ideal accompaniment for breakfast of all those who have intolerance or allergy to gluten, without detracting from the taste! So much so that even those who do not suffer from these disorders will not be able to do without them!

The choice of banana to mix

In the dough of these corn flour and hazelnut biscuits, the banana pulp instead of eggs to make the mixture soft, homogeneous and less fat. If you don't like the idea of ​​banana, you can use it with a whole egg and a yolk: you will get an even more crumbly but also more caloric biscuit.

Chocolate & friends

If you have no problems with your line and you are very greedy, you can indulge yourself and add to your dough dark chocolate chips, raisins, freeze-dried coconut flakes or oatmeal. Add these ingredients to the dough and finish the recipe as shown below: you will have a biscuit that will make you addict!

gluten-free-biscuits

The recipe for cornmeal and hazelnut biscuits

Here's how to proceed to prepare these cookies.

Ingredients

150 g of butter
100 g of rice flour
100 g of corn starch
90 g of banana pulp
85 g of cane sugar plus a little
80 g of corn flour
40 g of finely chopped hazelnuts
1 pinch of salt

Method

In a bowl, mix the butter with the sugar, a pinch of salt and the banana pulp. Mix everything well. Then add the rice flour, corn flour and starch and pour them into the bowl with the butter. Add the chopped hazelnuts and knead for a short time with your fingertips, as if it were the mixture of a tart. Wrap the dough in cling film and let it cool in the fridge for 1 hour. Then divide the dough into two parts and stretch them under the palm of your hands to obtain two cylinders with a diameter of 6 cm. Pass them in brown sugar poured into a deep plate and then slice them into 40 biscuits with a thickness of about 1 cm. Place them on a plate covered with a sheet of baking paper and let them cook for 20 minutes at 180 ° in a static oven. Once ready, wait for them to cool before serving.

In the tutorial, some more tips for preparing gluten free cookies

Proudly powered by WordPress

By continuing to use the site, you agree to the use of cookies. Click here to read more information about data collection for ads personalisation

The cookie settings on this website are set to "allow cookies" to give you the best browsing experience possible. If you continue to use this website without changing your cookie settings or you click "Accept" below then you are consenting to this.

Read more about data collection for ads personalisation our in our Cookies Policy page

Close