Food & Wine

Bologna for Food Lovers

Emilia-Romagna's delicacies on display in the old market area of Bologna
Emilia-Romagna’s delicacies on display in the old market area of Bologna.

Bologna is renowned for its cuisine, and for good reasons. This is the hometown of tortellini and mortadella, tagliatelle and ragù, among many other delicacies. Bologna boasts in fact one of the richest culinary traditions in Italy.

To experience this richness, head to the old medieval market and food shopping area, the Quadrilatero, whose tiny cobblestone streets are framed within a quadrilateral area by Piazza Maggiore, via Rizzoli, via Castiglione and via Farini. The market has occupied the same area in the city center since Roman times; its height was during the Middle Ages when, besides the many shops, it was home to the headquarters of many corporations of merchants which had begun to acquire great power with the shift to a new monetary economy.

The little streets within the Quadrilatero take their names from the shops and corporations that were based there: via Pescherie is where the fishmongers concentrated, via Orefici housed the goldsmiths, via Caprarie was home to the butchers selling sheep and goat meat, via Drapperie was for the upholsterers, and so on.

Quadrilatero Bologna
Plaque remembering the site where salumi, including mortadella, were made from the 13th to the 18th century.

Historic shops where you can taste and buy Bologna’s signature dishes abound. Start with:

Tortellini

Atti store in Bologna
Tortellini, tagliatelle, passatelli, and more pasta fresca on sale at historic Atti.

Bologna is no doubt synonymous with tortellini! Legend has it that their shape takes inspiration from Venus’ navel. The recipe for authentic tortellini was registered with Bologna’s Chamber of Commerce in 1974, and here it is: the dough is made with flour and eggs, while the filling contains pork loin, raw ham, mortadella di Bologna, Parmigiano Reggiano, eggs and nutmeg. One of Bologna’s signature figures, the sfogline, are the keepers of the city’s important tradition of hand-made pasta: women who patiently knead and roll the dough until it acquires the right thickness, and, in the case of tortellini, stuff, twist and seal them so they take their characteristic shape and do not break open. To enhance their taste, tortellini should be eaten with a broth of capon or hen. It is a typical winter dish that the Bolognesi often it for their Sunday lunches; it is also part of the traditional Christmas meal.

Where:

Atti, two locations, via Caprarie 7 and via Drapperie 6 – “the art of bread-making”, although bread isn’t the only product sold at this 1880 panificio (bakery). The store still has the original furniture. A nice idea for a souvenir or a gift is to buy tortellini and/or another typical product like certosino and have them wrapped in the store’s signature liberty box, the same that has been used since the 1900s.

tortellini Bologna
Atti’s liberty-style boxes to stuff with Bologna’s carb-loaded specialties 😉

Tamburini, via Caprarie 1 – an institution in Bologna since the 1930s, it is still managed by the same family that gives the shop its name. It sells an array of Bologna’s specialties; it is particularly renowned for tortellini and mortadella. They also have a self-service area; stop for lunch and try the famous tortellini al ragù.

Mortadella

As mentioned above, one of the essential ingredients of tortellini is mortadella, another great culinary delicacy hailing from Bologna. It seems that mortadella was already known and thoroughly appreciated by the Romans: proof of this is the mortarum, a utensil that was used to mince pork meat, which you can see inside Bologna’s Archaeological Museum. Further proof is Roman author Plinio, who once described how Emperor Augustus, passing by Bologna, was particularly impressed by this new salume. While today mortadella is considered one of the poor cold cuts, especially when compared to prosciutto or culatello, it used to be a food for the rich and powerful; it was even presented as a wedding gift to noblewoman Lucrezia Borgia when she married Alfonso I, Duke of Este. Mortadella was expensive too, due to the wide use of spices which helped to preserve it longer; it was nine times more expensive than bread, three times more expensive than ham and twice more expensive than olive oil. It is only in the 1800s with the new mechanized production techniques that mortadella became cheaper and available to all.

Where:

Salumeria Simoni, via Drapperie 5/2a – it sells artisan mortadella and all other local cold cuts. It also sells Parmigiano Reggiano.

Related:

mortadella Bologna
Artisan mortadella from Bologna.

Tagliatelle

The above mentioned Lucrezia Borgia seems to have been the inspiration for another typical Bolognese hand-made pasta, tagliatelle. Legend has it that Mastro Zefirano invented them for her wedding upon seeing her blonde braids. Cute story, however not true. Bologna’s Chamber of Commerce guards the recipe of tagliatelle, along with its measurement rule: tagliatelle should be 8 mm wide when cooked. Their thickness has not been defined, although experts say it should be between 6 and 8 tenth of a millimeter.

Where:

Sfoglia Rina, via Castiglione 5 – you can either buy pasta fresca to go or stop for lunch and choose from a traditional  menu or a seasonal one.

Ragù

And what goes best with tagliatelle if not ragù bolognese? The official recipe also rests with Bologna’s Chamber of Commerce since 1982, but with ragù there is a lot of leeway. If you ask Bolognese women, you will find there are many individual variations, and they seem to be very secretive about them too. The chief ingredient is minced beef; the tomato based sauce must cook for hours. Ragù goes well with many types of pasta, but especially with tagliatelle and lasagne; never ever eat it with spaghetti though – the Bolognesi consider it an insult!

Bolognese ragu
Homemade ragù (still piping hot!)

Where:

Try to get invited at the home of a Bolognese mamma or nonna. No local connections? Get a jar at historic Gilberto, located in via Drapperie 5 since 1905. This grocery store also sells Italian wines, sweets, jams, coffee, honey and balsamic vinegar.

There are many more excellent products making up Bologna’s rich food tradition; just walk around the market area, admire the delicacies on display and let your senses guide you.

Bologna's Chamber of Commerce where the recipes for tortellini and tagliatelle are guarded.
Bologna’s Chamber of Commerce where the recipes for tortellini and tagliatelle are guarded.

Love Bologna food? Go on a guided tour to learn about the rich culinary history of Bologna complete with tastings! Write me: bolognauncovered@gmail.com.

28 thoughts on “Bologna for Food Lovers”

  1. Ho sentito il gusto dei piatti che da bolognese “DOC ” hanno sempre accompagnato la mia vita.Well done!

  2. Gli amanti della buona cucina troveranno interessante l’articolo che mi sembra ben fatto ed esaustivo anche nei riferimenti storici. Da leggere lontano dai pasti per non incorrere in piacevoli tentazioni…

  3. We are heading to Bologna next week – june 2017 – at long last. We will also be in Lucca and Greve in Chianti. This is a much anticipated trip and we cannot wait. The history, food, architecture, wine and sunshine – I’m smiling already.

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