Panzanella Explained

Panzanella
Alternate Name:Panmolle
Country:Italy
Region:Umbria, Tuscany
Type:Salad
Main Ingredient:Bread, tomatoes, onions

Panzanella (pronounced as /it/) or panmolle (pronounced as /it/) is a Tuscan and Umbrian chopped salad of soaked stale bread, onions and tomatoes that is popular in the summer. It often includes cucumbers, sometimes basil and is dressed with olive oil and vinegar.

It is also popular in other parts of central Italy.

History

The 16th-century artist and poet Bronzino sings the praises of onions with oil and vinegar served with toast[1] and, a page later, speaks of a salad of onions, purslane, and cucumbers.[2] [3] This is often interpreted as a description of panzanella.[4]

The name is believed to be a portmanteau of "pane", Italian for 'bread', and "zanella", a deep plate in which it is served.

Ingredients

Panzanella was based on onions, not tomatoes, until the 20th century.[5]

Modern panzanella is generally made of stale bread soaked in water and squeezed dry, red onions, tomatoes, olive oil, vinegar, salt, and pepper. Cucumbers and basil are often added.

Other ingredients—lettuce, olives, mozzarella, white wine, capers, anchovies, celery, carrots, red wine, tuna, parsley, boiled eggs, mint, bell peppers, lemon juice, and garlic—are sometimes used, but Florentine traditionalists disapprove of them.[4]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. "In lode delle cipolle", Capitoli faceti editi ed inediti di Mess. Agnolo Allori detto il Bronzino..., Venice, 1822 text
  2. Web site: Li capitoli faceti editi ed inediti di mess. Agnolo. Bronzino. Pietro. Magrini. January 25, 1822. Dalla Tipografia di Alvisopoli. Google Books.
  3. News: Zeldes . Leah A. . Eat this! Panzanella: Ripe tomatoes turn stale bread into manna . Dining Chicago . Chicago's Restaurant & Entertainment Guide, Inc. . 2 September 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120306213050/http://www.diningchicago.com/blog/2009/09/02/eat-this-panzanella-ripe-tomatoes-turn-stale-bread-into-manna/ . 6 March 2012 .
  4. News: Marco . Bazzichi . Panzanella, tra tradizione e le varianti «immigrate» . . 18 August 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100820103947/http://corrierefiorentino.corriere.it/firenze/notizie/cronaca/2010/18-agosto-2010/panzanella-tradizione-varianti-immigrate-1703604602123.shtml . 20 August 2010 . Panzanella, between tradition and 'immigrant' variants . it .
  5. The earliest mention of tomatoes in panzanella found in Google Books is in 1928, in Le vie d'Italia (Rivista mensile del Touring Club Italiano 75)