Torrone - Chasing a Delightful
Legend
I recall enjoying Torrone as a kid though not often. Although few and far between, its arrival was always memorable. These domino size, snow-white nougat cakes teaming with nuts seemed reserved for Italian weddings and especially Christmas. I recall my mother breaking
Our Christmas Torrone Treats |
Forget the Ashtrays, No 'Butts" About This |
Some moments in time have been momentous enough
to have lasted forever. They are celebrated, sometimes reviled, but
nevertheless, in retrospect, remembered. Either way, the first appearance of
torrone was not one of those instances. It lacked a star in the East for Wise
Men to follow and others to chronicle. While torrone goes way back, the
vagaries that accompany long past events, if there really is a discrete event,
make it difficult to develop a coherent picture of who was involved, where it
occurred, and when that may have been. Like so many other events unremembered,
its origin remains obscure. What is clear is that my brief survey of what scant
information exists revealed that the rudimentary beginning of this celebrated
delight authored many a claim to birthplace and founding father.
In the early ages, China
was home to almonds. Almonds, along with spices, migrated to the West. Some
believe torrone may have originated in China in a nougat ancestor, and with the
help of Phoenician traders, who ruled the Mediterranean, made its way along to
Italian shores. We presently get a lot from China. Should we add torrone to the
list? I’d much rather believe it is Italian in origin, and there is evidence to
support this theory when we step back in time again, this time to the region of
present day Campania that was once home to the Samnites, an ancient tribal
people of central Italy. It is here that this exquisite dolce is thought
to have had its beginning.
“Texts
from the second and first centuries B.C. claim the Samnites, an ancient
civilization [circa 500 B.C.] of present-day Campania that battled with the
Roman Republic, invented a delicacy comprised of seed oils, egg whites, and
honey” [1].
“… that after the
Roman defeat in the Caudina Valley [summer of 321 B.C. during the Samnite Wars],
the Samnites offered this delicacy to the Romans who, if they survived, would
bear witness to their greatness. The cupedia had the double purpose of feeding
the Romans, who were about to die of starvation, as well as consoling them.[2]
This may account
for its arrival in multicultural Rome. The Romans, as told by historian Titus
Livius, liked to eat a confection based on honey and almonds called "cupedia,”
the Samnite name for torrone.
“According
to some Roman historians and writers such as Titus Livius and Martial, in
ancient Rome, there was a very similar recipe called cupedia or cupeto.” [2]
Its presence in Rome as
an ancient treat is confirmed in the cloudy writings of Marcus Gavius Apicius,
a celebrated 1st-century A.D. gourmet during the reign of Tiberius. He is someone
we’d likely label a foodie today. In the latter part of the third century,
his culinary canon was used to create an ancient cookbook, De
Re Coquinaria (On the Subject of Cooking), surprisingly still
available today. This most ancient European cookbook, its incompleteness marred
by a hurried hand void of literary skill making it hard to follow, and with
exact amounts of ingredients missing, is more observational than precise. This early
witness to Roman cuisine nevertheless includes a description of nucatum
(nougat), a sweet made of honey, walnuts, and egg whites. Ergo torrone? Is it
that straightforward?
Following the fall of the Roman Empire in 476 A.D., cupedia and nucatum
Page from 12th Century Arabic Remedy Manuscript |
Still, its most popular and most recent origination tale points to a historical 25 October 1441 document as the day of its appearance, or at least its mention, in Cremona, a city in the northern region of Lombardy also known as the birthplace of the world-renowned Stradivarius violin and Italian actor Ugo Tognazzi (La Cage aux Folles). This is date certain proof enough for the nearby Milanese. It coincides with the politically arranged wedding in Cremona —in that city's cathedral for security reasons since the groom was at war with her father — of general
Duke of Milan Francesco Sforza |
“According to the written account, the wedding celebrations took place in Cremona's main piazza and lasted three days and three nights. The Visconti family asked the court pastry chefs to create a new cake for the occasion. The cooks came up with a dense, hard cake made from whipped honey, almonds, and egg whites. Their aim was to make a long, rectangular dessert that resembled the famous campanili (bell tower) that flanks Cremona's cathedral. They aptly name the cake torrone, which resembles the word torrione for tower.” [1]
No Longer the Teenager, Meet Bianca Maria Visconti, Duchess of Milan |
After many Google probes into medieval cookery, I was lucky to
come across an intriguing recipe. From Spain, it is one from the cache of
Arabic documents that likely accumulated in Cremona. This Arabic tome compiled
in 1400 derived from earlier manuscripts which roughly spanned 1150 to 1230
A.D., contained about five hundred Arab language recipes. Known as the Maghreb
Manuscript, its trove included a particular dry dessert labeled Mu'aqqad.
While it was translated into English by Charles Perry only in 2005, some long-ago enterprising Italian like Gerardo, Giambonino, or a Cremona ducal pastry chef
just might have decoded it or possibly one of its earlier parent texts. It was
reported in 1184 that that Holy Roman Emperor who had made those many stops in
Cremona, had a court and kitchen staff that relied on Muslims right down to his
cooks.[7] To speculate further, the complete manuscript or a
scribbled note on how to make Mu'aqqad could easily have been brought
along in a traveler’s or merchant’s saddlebag. However the recipe arrived, you
will see it reads very much like the description for making torrone:
“Put a kail of
comb honey on a moderate fire until it dissolves, then strain it and return it
to the fire. Then beat the whites of twenty-five eggs, if comb honey, and
thirty if not, and throw them into the honey. Beat the mixture with a
confectionery cane until it whitens and thickens. Then throw in a ratl [about a
pound] of peeled almonds and serve it, God willing.” [8]
Success indeed spawns many fathers, often various birthdates, certainly
tales, and apparently has claims from multiple ethnic groups.
In memory of the Ducal wedding, each year
Cremona Italy's Piazza Where the Sforza Duke of Milan Wedding is Still Celebrated |
in the third week of November, the people of Cremona celebrate the delicious nougat candy through La Festa del Torrone, an eight-day extravaganza that includes a reenactment of the Duke and Duchesses’ legendary marriage. It is celebrated in style. In 1998 while the festival was in progress, Sperlari, Cremona's biggest and oldest torrone manufacturer, constructed a 380 foot-long (116 m) loaf of nougat weighing 1,323 pounds, with the hope of getting into the Guinness Book of World Records. Spelari employees then sliced the mega-torrone into 3,000 pieces and distributed them to attendees.[6] That record was broken in 2011 (660 m), again in 2015 (713 m) and reset once in 2019 by a mammoth 3,293 ft (1004 m) torrone in Mazzarino, Sicily.
Nothing approaching the class of a Guinness Champion, our particular little blue boxed discovery,
Flipside of One of Our Little BlueTorrone Boxes Tells the CremonaWedding Story |
Early Photo of Historic Cafe Ferrara |
Love of torrone
is not restricted to Cremona, nor is it without its variations. You’ll find it
made and consumed in every region around the boot, with each regional version
of torrone featuring different ingredients complete with claims theirs is the
"best." During festivals in Calitri, for example, vendors line the
sides of Corso Matteotti with plenty of the two traditional versions of the treat:
duro, tooth-breaking hard and brittle along with morbido, my blue
box soft and chewy kind.
“The
difference in making hard and soft torrone is in the cooking time and the
amount of egg whites used. Hard torrone is cooked up to ten hours whereas soft
torrone is cooked for no more than three hours. Because of the shorter cooking
time, the soft torrone ends up with a higher concentration of water which,
combined with a larger percentage of glucose, results in a softer dough.[3]
If you can’t
make it to Italy or easily find torrone nearby (one USA source Torrone Candy Company), here for the do-it-yourself
chef is just one of many torrone recipes you may enjoy making. [5] It’s
rather straightforward with no time delays like waiting for something to rise
or a stint in the frig cooling. Instead, like making risotto for those who love
to stir, your time is spent doing just that.
What
You’ll Need (not accounting for pots and pans)
About 2.5 hours - smile, after all this
is a classic Italian treat
2 (8x10-inch) sheets of Wafer Paper also
called Edible Rice Paper (if hard to find, forget it)
1 ⅓ cups honey
1 cup white sugar
3 tablespoons white sugar
2 large egg whites at room temperature
(so less time is spent getting them to peak)
1 pinch salt
¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon lemon zest
3 cups roasted almonds
1 cup roasted pistachios
Making It (too bad
my mom didn’t have Internet back then)
Ø
Line the 8x11-inch baking dish with plastic
wrap, allowing ends to hang over the sides.
Ø
Place chopped almonds and pistachios in a single
layer in a baking tray and toast in oven at 350º F for about 8 minutes or until
fragrant and shiny. To make it easier to later fold them into the nougat, keep
the roasted nuts in a warm place until ready to add at the end.
Ø
Place honey in a double boiler or large bowl
over a saucepan of water on the lowest heat. Ensure that the bowl is not
touching the water. Heat the honey until it melts, stirring occasionally with a
wooden spoon. Pour the honey into a heavy-bottomed pot. Add that cup of sugar. Mix
over low heat with a spatula for about 30 minutes, stirring constantly, until the
mixture turns from grainy to smooth and silky. Remove the pot from the heat.
Ø Place the egg whites in a separate mixing bowl then add a pinch of salt. Whisk until whites form soft peaks, 3 to 4 minutes. Place your heavy-bottomed pot back on low heat.
Ø Gradually whisk about a quarter of the whipped
egg whites into the honey/sugar mixture and then in 3 more batches, whisk in
the remaining egg whites.
Ø
Continue “cookin and a stirin” over low heat for
40-45 minutes (set a timer to help with this), slowly blending with a spatula
until the mixture thickens and turns pale until a ribbon of the mixture
drizzled on top of what you’ve been stirring doesn’t immediately incorporate
back into the mixture but remains intact on the surface for a while. Another
test – a drop of the mixture in a glass of ice-cold water should solidify into
a soft ball, not dissolve immediately. Ideally, it should feel like soft clay.
Ø Now whisk in the vanilla and lemon zest. Add the still warm almonds and pistachios and stir until they are evenly incorporated. Pour into your prepared baking dish. Even it out as best you can with a clean oiled spatula. Top with 2nd sheet of wafer
paper (edible rice paper), shiny side up. Cover with plastic wrap then press, tamping mixture down gently but firmly. Remove the top layer of plastic.
Ø Allow your Torrone to sit at room temperature until cool, firm, and ready to cut (1 or 2 hours – I lied about waiting). Grip the edges of the bottom layer of plastic wrap and lift Torrone from baking dish. Invert and remove plastic from the bottom. If the plastic wrap is difficult to remove from the edges, you can trim off the edges.
Ø
Cut into 1-inch squares using a sharp serrated
knife.
When no one is looking, go
ahead and lick your tools clean.
Well, I think that by now, I’ve stirred the pot enough from the veiled depths of torrone’s derivation on to its making. Now it’s your turn, unless you hate to stir. I doubt you will develop carpal
tunnel though, so I suggest you
get to it and join that vast and enduring pantheon of torrone lovers. It
doesn’t matter if with that first delicious nibble you imagine yourself among the
Samnites of Campania, Romans, Sicilian and Iberian Arabs, or the medieval
wedding revelers of Cremona. Whoever may have been responsible for its creation
or had a roll in passing it along to us today, whether that be a mom, the man
in the red suit, a pretty lady in white, or the people who stock your supermarket
shelves, say a prayer in thanks for all of them.
Paolo
[1] The
History of Torrone an Italian Christmas Dessert, La Cucina Italiana, https://www.lacucinaitaliana.com/italian-food/italian-dishes/the-history-of-torrone-an-italian-christmas-dessert
[2] 5 Places where you
can find the best Nougat in Italy, We
the Italians, https://wetheitalians.com/from-italy/5-places-where-you-can-find-best-nougat-italy
[3] Honey
Traveler, https://www.honeytraveler.com/honey-gastronomy/nougat/
For Cookbook see Kitab
al Tibakhah: A Fifteenth-Century Cookbook, Charles Perry, tr. The
translation was published in Petits Propos Culinaires #21‡ , 1985. The original
author is Ibn al-Mabrad (or Ibn al Mubarrad).
Description provided by David A. Friedman is on pg 124 of translation at:
http://daviddfriedman.com/Medieval/miscellany_pdf/Misc9recipes.pdf
[4]
Types of Torrone, https://www.cento.com/articles/2017/torrone.php
[5] Torrone (Italian Nut and Nougat Confection), https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/246463/torrone-italian-nut-and-nougat-confection/
[6] Cremona Torrone Festival, https://www.deliciousitaly.com/lombardia-food-wine/cremona-torrone-festival
[7] When the West First Tasted the Cuisines of the East, Manuscript of Cookbook Survey, Charles Perry, https://www.manuscriptcookbookssurvey.org/tag/charles-perry/
[8] An Anonymous Andalusian Cookbook of the 13th Century, Translated by Charles Perry, http://www.daviddfriedman.com/Medieval/Cookbooks/Andalusian/andalusian_contents.htm
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