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Roman holiday: a flour-filled (kosher) Pesach

Why special biscuits and ‘Jewish-style’ artichokes are a Passover treat for Italian food expert Silvia Nacamulli

March 16, 2023 14:36
Silvia Nacamulli cooking
4 min read

W ith Purim behind us, Pesach shops are opening their doors and families will be dusting down Seder schedules and picking this year’s menus.

There are plenty of new flavours to celebrate the spring festival. The colours on greengrocers’ displays will (hopefully) soon be popping with the green, pink and red hues of the season’s new spinach, rhubarb and radishes. For Italian Jews, Pesach traditions can be slightly different.
JC recipe contributor and author of Jewish Flavours of Italy, Silvia Nacamulli, will be looking forward to an ingredient with a more muted purple and green tones. A very seasonal vegetable for which she and her family wait all year.

“Come February and March I find myself longing for Romanesco artichokes. In Rome, my family cooks them almost non-stop in peak season. Our Passover Seder night would just not be the same without them, as my mum fries more than 50.”

Nacamulli, who admits to being mildly obsessed with the spiky vegetable, does not reserve this treat only for her family’s Pesach festivities. “If I can, I travel home [to Rome where she was born and raised] to satisfy my appetite for them.”

She says she loves “everything about artichokes, starting from the idea that they are actually flowers or, more precisely, thistles, that you can eat. They look fabulous when still young and closed, and I marvel at how they blossom with a gorgeous purple flower in the middle.” The parts of this elegant edible that are tender enough to eat — under the spiky exterior — are, in fact, flower buds. It has been an Italian delicacy for centuries and a firm favourite of with Jewish families.

“Although they’re expensive now, at one time they grew wild and were plentiful,” explains Nacamulli, who, in her book explains that in her country, Jews — often forced by poverty to become thrifty cooks — were known for the way in which they peeled artichokes.