Panzanella

Panzanella:  a classical Florentine salad with painterly associations….

 panzanella

Panzanella is a famous Florentine salad, also popular in other parts of Tuscany (notably Posara!). Its basic ingredients are bread and tomatoes, dressed in oil and vinegar, but you can add all sorts of other tasty things.

Ingredients

Stale bread, torn up into small squares. Preferably crusty baguette-type bread. (Lois says: “You could use regular sliced bread, but I won’t lie – your salad will be rubbish.”)

1 red onion, thinly sliced
6 juicy tomatoes, roughly chopped
a large handful each of capers, black olives and sun-dried tomatoes roughly chopped up small
fresh basil leaves, torn, the more the merrier
drizzle of balsamic vinegar
glug of extra virgin olive oil
squirt of lemon juice
salt & pepper 

Method

Chop up everything (except for the basil) and throw it into a nice big dish. Drizzle, glug and squirt seasonings.

Leave it to rest for at least 1 hour, then scatter the torn basil over it. A bit of green makes the salad look great and basil is ideal for a true Tuscan flavour.

Buon appetito!

Bill comments: “This truly is delicious. The Florentine traditionalists probably forego the capers, olives and sun-dried tomatoes, but I am all fot adding these. It is interesting that Florentine bread (but not the bread we use in Posara) is made without salt. The Florentines say it allows us to taste the flavours of the accompanying food, but I think I like a bit of salt in my bread, too. And it is noticeable that more recipes using day-old bread emanate from Florence than anywhere else in Italy!

“Of course, if you were a real traditionalist, you wouldn’t use tomatoes anyway: they didn’t arrive from the New World until the end of the 15th Century and they weren’t used in Italian cooking until much later. (Difficult to imagine Italian cooking without tomatoes, isn’t it?) One of the first descriptions of panzanella came from the poet and artist Bronzino, who wrote of a salad of onions, purslane (Portulaca oleracea) and cucumbers.”

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