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The ingredients of traditional pizza Margherita—tomatoes (red), mozzarella (white) and basil (green)—are inspired by the colours of the national flag of Italy. [1] ...
Panna cotta with chocolate. The name panna cotta is not mentioned in Italian cookbooks before the 1960s, [2] [3] yet it is often cited as a traditional dessert of the northern Italian region of Piedmont.
Cassata or cassata siciliana (/ k ə ˈ s ɑː t ə / kə-SAH-tə, Italian: [kasˈsaːta sitʃiˈljaːna]; Sicilian: [ka(s)ˈsaːta sɪʃɪˈljaːna]) is an Italian cake originating in the Sicily region.
Italian-American cuisine (Italian: cucina italoamericana) is a style of Italian cuisine adapted throughout the United States. Italian-American food has been shaped throughout history by various waves of immigrants and their descendants, called Italian Americans.
Clockwise from top left; some of the most popular Italian foods: Neapolitan pizza, carbonara, espresso, and gelato. Italian cuisine is a Mediterranean cuisine [1] consisting of the ingredients, recipes, and cooking techniques developed in Italy since Roman times, and later spread around the world together with waves of Italian diaspora.
A cup of cappuccino and cornetti at breakfast (colazione). The most popular breakfast (colazione) is sweet, consumed at home or at a café.If the breakfast is consumed at home, it consists of coffee (espresso or prepared with a moka pot), milk, or caffè latte accompanied by baked goods such as biscuits, for example shortbread, or by slices of bread spread with butter and jam or with honey or ...
Chocolate salami is an Italian and Portuguese dessert made from cocoa, broken biscuits, butter and sometimes alcohol such as port wine or rum.The dessert became popular across Europe and elsewhere, often losing alcohol as an ingredient along the way.
Bagna càuda [1] (Piedmontese: [ˈbɑɲa ˈkɑʊ̯da]; lit. ' hot dip ' or ' hot gravy '), also spelled bagna caouda [2] in Alpes-Maritimes, is a hot dish made with garlic and anchovies, typical of Lower Piedmont, a geographical region of Piedmont, Italy, [3] [4] and Provence, France.