Casatiello (; ) is a Leavening agent savory bread originating from Naples prepared during the Easter period.
Its basic ingredients are flour, lard, cheese, salami, cracklings, eggs and black pepper.
The bread is mentioned in the passage where he describes the king's celebrations to find the girl who had lost her slipper:
In the 19th century, casatiello is also mentioned in the book Costumi e tradizioni di Napoli e dintorni ( Customs and traditions of Naples and the surrounding area), published in 1858 and edited by Francesco De Bourcard, a Neapolitan scholar of Swiss origin, who describes the bread and its preparation, stating that the casatello (sic) was baked at home for the Easter lunch and offered as a gift to neighbors and "to the servants and the laundress".
The dough is worked into the shape of a doughnut, placed in a mould and left to rise for a long time, at least 12 hours; if made with quick leaven, about two hours are enough. The bread is then baked, traditionally in a wood-fired oven.
Casatiello is usually prepared on Good Friday, left to rise overnight, baked the following day, and eaten on Holy Saturday and Easter Monday.
The casatiello, unlike similar products such as tortano, is prepared around Easter, from which it borrows the symbolism: the strips of bread arranged to cage the eggs half-submerged in the dough represent the cross on which Jesus died while the ring shape is a reminder of the cyclical nature of the Easter resurrection and of Christ's crown of thorns.
During the preparation, the eggs are placed whole and baked in the oven together with the dough. While some bakers put them raw, others prefer to use already hard-boiled eggs. The cooking takes place at for about 60 minutes.
The bread can also be used as a packed lunch during the traditional trips out of town () on Easter Monday.
Casatiello can be kept for a maximum of two or three days, then it becomes harder and harder. In Naples, a stale casatiello is named " ammazzaruto" (), and then by extension "hard".
Ingredients and preparation
Variants
Sweet variant
In popular culture
See also
Cited sources
Bibliography
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