Panzanella

Panzanella is a summer dish typical of Central Italy, very appreciated in Tuscany, Umbria, Marche, Latium, Campania. It is once more a recipe born from poverty and necessity to reuse stale bread.

But as always, the use of great ingredients makes of this simple food a delicious summer dish.

It is documented that already in the XVI th century Bronzino, an important painter and poet at the Medici’s court, in one of his poems had elevated to celestial food a bread salad made with onions, cucumber, and arugula: basically, a Panzanella without the tomatoes. He didn’t know yet how greatly the recipe would be improved when tomatoes would be mixed in the salad, since they were imported from the Americas and didn’t start to be a common staple until the XVII century.

So, what is the secret of the Panzanella? It’s the stale bread, preferably unsalted, mixed with great tomatoes and herbs, superior EV olive oil, onions. And the rest is left to your fantasy, you can add cucumbers, or hard-boiled eggs, or canned anchovies or sardines, or more, but you really don’t need to: try it to believe!

Panzanella is a healthy dish: red tomatoes are a great source of lycopene a molecule that not only gives tomatoes their red color, but which has antioxidant properties with protective effects against certain cancers, and has the ability to lower the bad cholesterol LDL. Together with lutein and zeaxanthin, also present in tomatoes, lycopene protects your eyes from various forms of disease. In addition, all tomatoes are a great source of polyphenols and of vitamin C.
Among many other benefits, raw onions help lower cholesterol, and their anti-allergen effect helps people with respiratory problems linked to allergies.

The benefits of polyphenols and unsaturated fatty acids that are associated with the consumption of extra virgin olive oil have been explored at length and are summarized in The Gut Immune Connection. Basil also has strong anti-inflammatory properties, which can fight many diseases. So in this dish, the only ingredient that may be less advantageous is bread, but you can easily substitute the white bread with whole grain bread, rich in fiber and nutritional properties. And don’t forget, the great satisfaction that you get from this dish is the feeling of satiety, that will not bring you back to the refrigerator too quickly.

PREMIUM CONTENT for MEMBERS ONLY

Please login to view this content , or sign up for an account

Ingredients

For 4 Servings

1 cup Carnaroli rice
1 medium onion, chopped
2-3 tablespoons of EV Olive Oil
½ glass of white table wine
1 pint chicken stock preprepared (or vegetable stock)
1 cup rinsed blueberries
1 cup roasted chestnuts or more, chopped in big pieces
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons gorgonzola cheese (optional)