Tag: Panettone

Gluten-free panettone: what’s new for the 2023 holidays – Italian Cuisine

Gluten-free panettone: what's new for the 2023 holidays


Gluten-free panettone finally exists, and it’s delicious. It is becoming a specialty of many confectionery companies, but also of large pastry shops: a real testing ground both for giants and for small and medium-sized artisans, with increasingly satisfying results, which make the dessert par excellence for the holidays truly democratic, for everyone.

Gluten-free panettone, and the numbers of celiac disease in Italy

After all, it is a necessity. Estimates from the Istituto Superiore di Sanità say that in Italy 600 thousand people suffer from celiac disease, and just as many suffer from it, but without knowing it because they have not been diagnosed. Much higher, then, are the numbers of those who are “only” – so to speak – intolerant to gluten. Over a million consumers who, on balance, due to a health problem, if there were no suitable offers, would also have to give up dessert par excellence for the holidays.

Gluten-free panettone: what’s new for 2023

Gluten-free panettone is for them, but it is also for those who want to vary and try different flavours: it is made with rice flour often mixed with potato starch and, not infrequently, with lactose-free milk and butter. The fillings? Are the same. Now you can choose: gluten-free panettone can be filled like the more traditional leavened one, with candied fruit and raisins, only with one or the other, but also without. Among this year’s proposals there are also many delicious variations, including the gluten-free chocolate panettone, and the one with ice cream.

Panettone Dessert Recipe | The Italian kitchen – Italian Cuisine

Panettone Dessert Recipe |  The Italian kitchen


The panettone dessert it is a perfect idea to bring one of the traditional desserts to the table in an original way Christmas and also for recycle leftover panettone during the holidays.

The dessert is inspired by the recipe of iced panettone with three creams by Iginio Massariborn in Brescia in 1942 and today recognized as one of the greatest pastry chefs in the world, as well as one of the “fathers” of contemporary panettone and pandoro.

Preparing the panettone dessert is simple: the panettone must be cut into pieces cubes which should be browned in butter, sprinkled with an alcohol and dusted with icing sugar; these should then be placed on a plate or in a cup, interspersing them with vanilla cream, chocolate cream And whipped Cream.

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San Biagio and the miracle of panettone – Italian Cuisine

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Every year, on February 3 in Lombardy, it is customary to consume a piece of Christmas panettone for breakfast in the morning, often set aside as a tribute to this tradition. Let's find out why




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An ancient Milanese saying goes: San Biàs a l ’te presèrve la góla from i rèsche de pèss and from töt ol rèst (San Biagio you protect your throat from fish bones and other ailments), but the old Milanese who still speak the dialect – I asked for confirmation from certain sources – are keen to emphasize that San Biàs el benedis la góla and él nas – the nose should not be forgotten, 'victim' together with the throat of seasonal ailments (it is no coincidence that the anniversary falls immediately after the very cold Days of the Blackbird).
There tradition of Milan and its province in fact, on the morning of San Biagio, February 3, the Lombard families have breakfast with a piece of leftover panettone since Christmas, which are attributed "miraculous" properties capable of warding off ailments and protecting themselves from sore throats.

The patron of otolaryngologists
In truth, San Biagio da Sebaste (Armenia), a bishop who lived in the third century and venerated as a saint by the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, is celebrated throughout Italy with village festivals and signs of devotion. One of the miracles attributed to him tells that he saved a child from a fish bone that had stuck in his throat: Biagio, who was a doctor, gave the boy who was suffocating a large crumb of bread which, going down his throat, removed the bone. saving his life (this technique is still in use). After suffering martyrdom, Biagio was made a saint by the Church and declared throat protector.
More generally, according to the Lombard tradition, the day of San Biagio definitively closes the period linked to Christmas.

Miracle in Milan
The link between the Milanese capital, panettone and San Biagio, however, arises from the history that started this tradition: it seems that one day, just before the Christmas period, a housewife brought a friar, who was called Desiderio, a panettone because he blessed it. Very busy, the friar asked her to leave it with him and to spend the following days picking it up. But the woman did not show up for days and days. Busy and perhaps distracted, certainly greedy, Brother Desiderio, after having blessed him, not seeing the woman return, forgot about the cake except to nibble it gradually for several days, until only the wrapping and a few crumbs remained. The woman came back to ask for her blessed panettone on 3 February, the day of San Biagio: the mortified friar prepared to give her the empty package and apologize, but when he gave the housewife the wrapper, he realized that it was not empty. but it contained a panettone twice the size of the original.

Thus began, with the 'miracle of San Biagio', the tradition of bringing the leftover panettone to bless and then eating it for breakfast every February 3, to protect the throat from seasonal ailments. For this reason, in the days preceding February 3, the so-called "panettone di San Biagio", what remains of the production for the holidays, are on sale.

A special cake

San Biagio is not only linked to the tradition of eating auspicious panettone, but also a particular traditional dessert typical of Mantua, the San Biagio cake, originally from Cavriana, a town famous for almonds, known and appreciated since the time of the Gonzagas. The cake, which is a De.Co product (municipal denomination), wants a filling of dark chocolate and almonds in a shortcrust pastry shell. It seems that in the 17th century this almond-based cake was produced with a diameter of about 3 meters. This huge cake was for the community: the cake was then cut and offered to the public in Piazza Castello.

There are those who buy it "ad hoc" and those who keep it from the Christmas holidays but, given the times, to protect us from winter ailments, sore throats and colds it is advisable to honor this greedy custom of February 3.

Francesca Tagliabue
February 2022

Posted 01/02/2022

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