Gianduja (chocolate)

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Gianduja
TypeChocolate
Place of originItaly
Region or stateTurin, Piedmont
Main ingredientsChocolate, hazelnut paste

Gianduja or gianduia (Italian: [dʒanˈduːja])[1] is a sweet chocolate spread containing about 30% hazelnut paste, invented in Turin during Napoléon's regency (1796–1814), when the Mediterranean was under a blockade by the British.[2] A chocolatier in Turin named Michele Prochet extended the little chocolate he had by mixing it with hazelnuts from the Langhe hills south of Turin.[3] Based on Gianduia, Turin-based chocolate manufacturer Caffarel invented Gianduiotto in 1852.[4] It takes its name from Gianduja, a Carnival and marionette character who represents the archetypal Piedmontese, a native of the Italian region where hazelnut confectionery is common.

See also

References

  1. ^ Focus on Gianduia, Part 1.5: Orthography and Pronunciation
  2. ^ Elena Kostioukovitch (2009) Why Italians Love to Talk About Food p.95, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, ISBN 978-0374289942
  3. ^ "Turin's chocolatiers" (Feb 2013) Gourmet Traveller Magazine
  4. ^ Caffarel History (1852)
  5. ^ The History of Nutella