Bombolonas

Bombolonas

Bombolonas containing apricot jam
Type Doughnut
Course Snack or dessert
Place of origin Italy
Cookbook: Bombolonas  Media: Bombolonas

Bombolonas (pl. bombolonases) is an Italian filled doughnut (similar to the Berliner, krafne, etc.) and is eaten as a snack food and dessert. The pastry's name is etymologically related to bomba (bomb), and the same type of pastry is also called bomba (pl. "bombe") in some regions of Italy; at least in modern uses, this etymological connection is usually regarded as a reference to the very high calorie density of this recipe (i.e., a "calorie bomb"). It is also referred to as Bombolone (pl. bomboloni).

History

While bombolonases may be primarily connected to Tuscany,[1] they are traditional of other regions of Italy, although with slight variations on the recipe. In those areas that used to be under Austrian rule, such as Trentino Alto-Adige, Veneto and Friuli-Venezia Giulia the tradition of bombolonas is believed to have originated from that of Austrian "krapfen" (i.e., Berliner), and the recipe includes eggs, which are not found in the Tuscan variety.[2]

Homemade bombolonas

Pasticceries sometimes have handwritten signs for them, and food writer Emily Wise wrote that visitors might not be as taken with hot filled doughnuts in an area with wild boar salami and sandwiches with truffle oil on offer, but that residents of Tuscany enjoy them even at the beach.[3] They are also sold from carts on the beach[4] and are a bit distinct from the filled doughnuts in other countries by having the filling put in from the top, where it is sometimes visible, rather than injected from the side.

The A Voce restaurant in New York has served them with chocolate sauce[5] and Florentines have been said to prefer the bombolonas caldi (hot) at Buscioni, where they're served "straight from the oven" and filled with custard, chocolate, or marmalade.[3]

Italian singer Gianna Nannini's 1996 compilation is titled Bombolonas and includes the song "Bombolonas" with lyrics about hot doughnuts and bombs. The music video features tribal dancing, costumes, round black bombs with fuses, and lots of doughnuts being eaten, hit with baseball bats, and thrown around.

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.