Misplaced Pages

Pandoro

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Italian sweet bread
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Pandoro" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Pandoro
TypeDessert bread
Place of originItaly
Region or stateVerona, Veneto
Created byDomenico Melegatti
Main ingredientsFlour, eggs, butter, sugar

Pandoro (Italian: [panˈdɔːro]) is an Italian sweet bread, most popular around Christmas and New Year. Typically a product of the city of Verona, Veneto, pandoro traditionally has an eight-pointed shape. It is often dusted with vanilla scented icing sugar, which is said to resemble the snowy peaks of the Alps during Christmas.

Its name and origins are attributed to the Italian pastry chef Domenico Melegatti.

History

This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
A classical pandoro

Pandoro appeared in remote times, the product of breadmaking, as the name, pan d'oro (lit. 'golden bread'), suggests. Throughout the Middle Ages, white bread was consumed solely by the rich, while the common people ate black bread. Sweet breads were reserved for the nobility. Bread enriched with eggs, butter, and sugar or honey as a sweetener were served in their palaces and known as "royal bread" or "golden bread".

17th century desserts were described in the book Suor Celeste Galilei, Letters to Her Father, published by La Rosa of Turin, and included "royal bread" made from flour, sugar, butter and eggs.

The first citation of a dessert clearly identified as pandoro dates to the 18th century. The dessert certainly figured in the cuisine of the Venetian aristocracy. Venice was the principal market for spices as late as the 18th century, as well as for the sugar that by then had replaced honey in European pastries and bread made from leavened dough. It was at Verona, in Venetian territory, that the formula for making pandoro was developed and perfected, a process that required a century. The modern history of this dessert bread began there on October 30, 1894, when Domenico Melegatti obtained a patent for a procedure to be applied in producing pandoro industrially. Melegatti formed a pandoro company in 1896, which survived a bankruptcy crisis in 2017.

See also

References

  1. "Pandoro And Panettone: The Staples Of An Italian Christmas". Italics Magazine. 2023-12-07. Retrieved 2024-02-16.
  2. "Christmas favourite Pandoro cake survives bankruptcy through Malta equity fund". MaltaToday.com.mt. Retrieved 2024-02-16.

Bibliography

  • Di Giovine, Elia (1989). Pandoro. Successo segreto di un dolce dalle origini alla fase industriale [Pandoro. Secret success of a sweet from its origins to mass production] (in Italian). Gemma Editco. ISBN 8889125284.
  • Lo Russo, Giuseppe (2004). Dolce Natale (in Italian). Fratelli Alinari. ISBN 88-7292-473-1.

External links

Christmas
In
Christianity
In folklore
Gift-bringers
Companions of
Saint Nicholas
Traditions
By country
Music
Other media
In
modern
society
Food and
drink
Dinner
Sweets
Soup
Sauces
Beverages
Dumplings
Meat and fish
Types
Choux pastry
Puff pastry
Poppy seed
Other
By country
Chinese
Filipino
French
Greek
Indonesian
Iranian
Italian
Romanian
Scandinavian
Swiss
Taiwanese
Turkish
Related
topics
Italian breads
Types
Loaves and buns
Flatbreads
Leavened
Unleavened
Crackers and breadsticks
Sweet breads
Techniques and concepts
Categories:
Pandoro Add topic