Struffoli
Course | Dessert |
---|---|
Place of origin | Italy |
Region or state | Naples |
Main ingredients | Dough, honey |
Cookbook: Struffoli Media: Struffoli |
Struffoli (Italian pronunciation: [ˈstruffoli]) is a Neapolitan dish made of deep fried balls of dough about the size of marbles. Crunchy on the outside and light inside, struffoli are mixed with honey and other sweet ingredients. There are many different ways to dress them, but the traditional way is to mix them in honey with diavulilli (nonpareils sprinkles), cinnamon, and bits of orange rind. In Calabria they are also known as scalilli, and in Abruzzi cicerchiata. They are often served at Christmas and are sometimes served warm.
History
A similar dish is described by Archestratus, a Greek poet from Gela in Sicily. It was called enkris (Greek: ἐγκρίς) — a dough-ball fried in olive oil, which he details in his Gastronomy; a work now lost, but partially preserved in the Deipnosophists of Athenaeus, which mentions enkris thirteen times, in various inflected forms.[1] The most complete description of it in the Deipnosophists is a passage that reads:
πεμμάτιον ἑψόμενον ἐν ἐλαίῳ καὶ μετὰ τοῦτο μελιτούμενον, μνημονεύει αὐτῶν Στησίχορος διὰ τούτωνχόνδρον τε καὶ ἐγκρίδας ἄλλα τε πέμματα καὶ μέλι χλωρόν.
There are cakes, also, called ἐγκρίδες. These are cakes boiled in oil, and after that seasoned with honey; and they are mentioned by Stesichorus in the following lines:—
Groats and encrides, And other cakes, and fresh sweet honey.[2]
Similar dishes
- Gulab jamun - A small pastry made with milk solids in South Asia.
- Croquembouche - A similar French dish.
- Lokma - a sweet dumpling found throughout the Mediterranean basin
- Puff puff in Nigeria is also very similar
- Pignolata - a similar Sicilian pastry.
- Teiglach - a similar Jewish pastry[3]
See also
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Struffoli. |
Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe/module on |
- ↑ Perseus Project "Word frequency information for ἐγκρίς", available at: , retrieved 27 June, 2015
- ↑ Athenaeus, The Deipnosophists, translated by Charles Burton Gulick, Cambridge, MA. Harvard University Press, London; William Heinemann Ltd., 1927
- ↑ Teiglach