I had italian neighbors that once made dozens of Sfogliatella for a community event. They were practically begging everyone to eat them because they didn't want the pain they went through to be for nothing.
Subtitle: Why is 𝓼𝓯𝓸𝓰𝓵𝓲𝓪𝓽𝓮𝓵𝓵𝓮 so hard to make. If you ask any Italian chef out there they will all tell that 𝓼𝓯𝓸𝓰𝓵𝓲𝓪𝓽𝓮𝓵𝓵𝓮 is one of the hardest Italian pastries to make in the world.
@@JeasusJackson bah ho visto the red army choir cantare bella ciao con una pronuncia buonissima, se dei russi ci riescono pire degli Inglesi lo sapranno fare
My Grandma made this for us when I was a kid. Grandma was 1st generation Italian American and 3rd oldest of 27 (yes 27) brothers and sisters. She was taught old world cooking from her mother. Out of 7 grandchildren i was the oldest and the only boy. I was also the only one that offered to help when she cooked and baked as I found it fascinating. She taught me many awesome tips over the years that I've heard echoed from various Food Network stars like it was a new thing. In 2012 she passed away, peacefully in her sleep even though she was as active and sassy as ever at 92, RIP. The point is that in her will she left me three things. The "special spoon", a fancy silver spoon that us grandkids would fight over which i usually let my sister use. Her old rolling pin, which she knew i loved. Lastly her recipes (including sfogliatella), which she told no one and were given to me on the condition that I tell no one untll i hand them down. I adored my Grandparents, but otherwise my family sucks. I had everyone from my mom to aunts and uncles and cousins trying to get me to share those recipes with them. And did I? Nope. But I do cook them for my family (wife and kids) and my in-laws (because they don't suck). My daughter has shadowed me in the kitchen ever since she was little and at 30 she is the lead baker and decorator at a high end cake shop, so...
@@Eris_StrifeMy brother... Thank you for this little story. I read every word and resonated with it. My grandmother is a great cook and everything you mentioned in your relationship with your grandma was pretty much how it was for us (my grandma and I). I say 'is' cuz I can never accept that she has left. She left just abt a year ago.. and I've been down.. really down. Every moment hurts. But your story put a smile on my face. A very bittersweet one. Only sad thing is that.. my family is extremely fucked up hence, there was never a will. I own nothing of hers but the memories we shared ❤I remember some of her recipes by heart so I guess its okay..
My mom was an OK cook. She made this "French Chicken" dish every time we came home or they came to visit. How I hated that dish. Meanwhile everyone else got my dad's gumbo or crawfish bisque or something else wonderful. My mom did have a cream cheese pie recipe that she gave my sister in law. She wouldn't share it with her children but I sure did. I do love that pie.
For those of you wondering. The significant difficulty of this dish comes from getting the layers for the crust done well. The thinner you are able to get each layer of the crust the better. As you increase the number of layers it becomes harder to work with the dough and very easy to tear or mess up. This is in addition to the time that it takes to make. For a basic recipe and average bakers, you can make it good enough, but high-quality authentic Sfoglitella requires dedication and practice, like any culinary art dish.
As an italian i'm really happy you nailed it. Sfogliatella napoletana and coda di aragosta are one of the best neapolitan pastries, but the best way is to use a pasta machine to roll the dough to more than paper thin
The only downside is it isnt even as nearly as good as other italian breads, yet it is harder and more laborious to make, but successfully making should be rewarding enough
@@Bandicoot_Power I’ve heard of people who grew up in the mountains who you would think are German. It’s possible maybe he grew up in a French speaking population
@@jaytravis2487 really similar alphabet and pronunciation, despite being similar, you can recognize Russian because it uses harsher sounds than italian and has words mainly made up of consonants
@@watouat1013as a professional baker, this is definitely not a beginner friendly recipe. But puff is def harder. I’d even argue danish is harder. This is a lot more straight forward and the only real risk would be tarring during the rolling process. Which if you’re a decent enough baker would not be too hard
@@shr9662making puff french style isnt just hard. Without a rolling table its nigh impossible to truly get 1000 layers without anything breaking along the way (at least in my experience(im a professionally trained pastry chef))
Something i really dislike about these videos is that he tells you that it's "THE hardest" dish to make, then he goes on to describe the process of making it without outlining the actual difficulty AT ALL.
@@gregoriocitti4018 It's possibly just in my head tbh, but to me there seems to be a high level of pride in traditional Italian styles of cooking, where western versions of foods are treated as inferior (people dogging on American pizza vs Italian pizza, for example), that and people getting upset when people use substitutes like cream for pastas lol
@@KameraJunior Well, not just candied orange peels, but lemon and cider (similar to a giant lemon that's bigger than grapefruit and has a really thick white part of peel) candied peels aswell. You just cut 'em in 1cm squares and mix 'em in the filling and that's basicly how they make it in Naples which is considered the place they invented sfogliatella. Oh, and another thing... they also love to add orange flour water for the aroma... In Italy orange flower water is like looking for vanilla: it's in any baking section of every supermarket. Definetly worth trying out, the aroma is very delicate and carachteristic, but not overpowering. They also have this custardy pie in Naples called Pastiera and it's also amazing and the filling is very unique: they boil grains of wheat (they soaked up in water the night before) in milk with sugar and cinnamon bars, let it cool, add eggs, ricotta, the above mentioned candied peels and orange flower water and it's unbelivably chunky and runny when you put it in the oven, but it's so soft, creamy, chewy and juicy and I cann't explain it but as days go by, it tastes better and better... 😂 The best thing is if you keep on a room temperature, becouse all the flavours really burst out... 🤤
I had my first one in Salerno a few years back and it changed me. Best pastry I’ve ever had. I’ve attempted to make it once but it was so tricky. You’re inspiring me to try again my friend.
Choose a food and set your destination. The canoli is from Sicily. That's an interesting, somewhat unique part of Italy. Might not be best for a first trip, but the canolis are good. You can skip the aranchini. If you are married, head to the Almafi Coast for limoncello. The island is romantic. Positano is probably the best town on the mainland. I don't recommend Bistecca alla Florentina, but if it gets you to Florence... Not sure if it's local to Florence, but they have amazing fococcia pizza there. You'll be close to the Tuscan wine region and hilltowns. I had my best meals in the northern mountains and foothills of the mountains. Not sure if anything was endemic to the area, but all my pasta dishes were excellent. I had hoped to enjoy the food more in south because my family is from Puglia. Seemed like the further south you go the more likely you'll be served cookies and cake (torte di mandorle) for breakfast.
Wherever you go, eat local food and you’ll be satisfied. And contrary to what another comment is saying, if you go to sicily eat as many arancini as you can, they’re wonderful☺️
I always loved your ending lines, now im gonna subscribe you
So happy you like them ❤️🤩 I work hard on them ❤️
@@KameraJunior dont stop making good contents, love from malaysia ❤️
@@takeohazwan6829 thank you so much ❤️🙏
Me too
i generally love his videos. haha!
I had italian neighbors that once made dozens of Sfogliatella for a community event. They were practically begging everyone to eat them because they didn't want the pain they went through to be for nothing.
Did everyone eat them all?
@@garlicbread967 i hope so, they're divine
They can give the ones that weren’t eaten to me
@@inserisciilnome6909 they're alright
@@EyesackWorley I sense a disturbance in the force.
Damn, you make me want to get a pastry at 11 pm
Whooops sorry my friend 😁
@@God_emperor_Doom 😐
Bro im watching this at exactly 11 pm
@@God_emperor_Doomok
its 11; 17 now and i just ate
Is it just me or does anyone else find it so satisfying whenever he says 'Sfogliatella'?
Supremely annoying
It is satisfying because he pronounced it correctly, which is a breath of fresh air
@@JohnRNewAccountNumber3I like hearing an italian say it correctly instead of a midwest white lady say it incorrectly in her youtube video 😂
@@yunggoosbumps215 at this point I just default to Napolotan slang because it pisses everyone off
Im getting strokes whenever he says
SfOGliAtela
someone should show this to the ego baking guy
Lol I was thinking of him he'll probably mess it up and never adress it.
@@PJM16072 literally his entire series in one sentence
u mean louis gantus?
Louis gantus
that was my thought too
Subtitle: Why is 𝓼𝓯𝓸𝓰𝓵𝓲𝓪𝓽𝓮𝓵𝓵𝓮 so hard to make. If you ask any Italian chef out there they will all tell that 𝓼𝓯𝓸𝓰𝓵𝓲𝓪𝓽𝓮𝓵𝓵𝓮 is one of the hardest Italian pastries to make in the world.
Because it is. 😂
How tf you even write cursive on UA-cam?
As a french person Im just like ahhh so an italian stuffed crossiant. Yum! 😅
@@mainhandle101 you serious? Pay? That’s ridiculous.
@@smavi4133
some keyboards have the option for fancy fonts
𝕛𝕦𝕤𝕥 𝖑𝖎𝖐𝖊 𝔱𝔥𝔦𝔰
Lard is traditionally used in the south Italy because the warm climate turned rancid butter quickly, before the invention of fridge
That's really interesting! I knew the north was more butter/beer than the souths wine/olive oil, but I wondered what they used for baking
Alternative title: "Why Sfogliatella is so hard to pronounce?"
Edit: I’m a normal person so I wont spam my comment with thanks for the likes.
Sfo-glia-te-lla is easy because in italian we don't have strange pronunciations A is pronounced A and same for other letters.
@@lsimo102 Ok thanks
@@lsimo102è facile per noi, per loro ovviamente no.
@@JeasusJackson bah ho visto the red army choir cantare bella ciao con una pronuncia buonissima, se dei russi ci riescono pire degli Inglesi lo sapranno fare
@@lsimo102 beh dipende, la loro a si pronuncia ei, in ogni caso.
Quindi anche per loro a si pronuncia a, ma è comunque diverso.
As an Italian im positively surprised for how good your pronunciation is keep it up mate really nice content as usual :)
Grazie mille amico ❤️
@@KameraJunior Great Italian, mate !
I love the the language 🇮🇹❤️
Approved
@@avoig_3219lion field
My Grandma made this for us when I was a kid. Grandma was 1st generation Italian American and 3rd oldest of 27 (yes 27) brothers and sisters. She was taught old world cooking from her mother. Out of 7 grandchildren i was the oldest and the only boy. I was also the only one that offered to help when she cooked and baked as I found it fascinating. She taught me many awesome tips over the years that I've heard echoed from various Food Network stars like it was a new thing. In 2012 she passed away, peacefully in her sleep even though she was as active and sassy as ever at 92, RIP. The point is that in her will she left me three things. The "special spoon", a fancy silver spoon that us grandkids would fight over which i usually let my sister use. Her old rolling pin, which she knew i loved. Lastly her recipes (including sfogliatella), which she told no one and were given to me on the condition that I tell no one untll i hand them down. I adored my Grandparents, but otherwise my family sucks. I had everyone from my mom to aunts and uncles and cousins trying to get me to share those recipes with them. And did I? Nope. But I do cook them for my family (wife and kids) and my in-laws (because they don't suck). My daughter has shadowed me in the kitchen ever since she was little and at 30 she is the lead baker and decorator at a high end cake shop, so...
I wanna know what your great-grandparents were doing……
@@__flamingbagel Making Catholics like good Catholics. And farm hands.
@@Eris_StrifeMy brother... Thank you for this little story. I read every word and resonated with it. My grandmother is a great cook and everything you mentioned in your relationship with your grandma was pretty much how it was for us (my grandma and I). I say 'is' cuz I can never accept that she has left. She left just abt a year ago.. and I've been down.. really down. Every moment hurts. But your story put a smile on my face. A very bittersweet one. Only sad thing is that.. my family is extremely fucked up hence, there was never a will. I own nothing of hers but the memories we shared ❤I remember some of her recipes by heart so I guess its okay..
My mom was an OK cook. She made this "French Chicken" dish every time we came home or they came to visit. How I hated that dish. Meanwhile everyone else got my dad's gumbo or crawfish bisque or something else wonderful. My mom did have a cream cheese pie recipe that she gave my sister in law. She wouldn't share it with her children but I sure did. I do love that pie.
You work in a kitchen now?
I'm touched, finally a UA-camr who says Italian words correctly🥹
Love this content but he says everything in baking is the hardest in the world
You're funny dude
For those of you wondering. The significant difficulty of this dish comes from getting the layers for the crust done well. The thinner you are able to get each layer of the crust the better.
As you increase the number of layers it becomes harder to work with the dough and very easy to tear or mess up.
This is in addition to the time that it takes to make. For a basic recipe and average bakers, you can make it good enough, but high-quality authentic Sfoglitella requires dedication and practice, like any culinary art dish.
thank you. this guy didnt say shit. blocking their account now
Lol the video definitely didn't answer the presented question, but it was very cute and fun to watch!
Thank you for actually answering the question:)
the hardest part is remembering how to spell the name correctly to google the instructions
@@sprout4096hahahaha 😂
Thx bc I’m like so where was the difficulty?
As an italian i'm really happy you nailed it. Sfogliatella napoletana and coda di aragosta are one of the best neapolitan pastries, but the best way is to use a pasta machine to roll the dough to more than paper thin
Facts!
Thank you! that's a great idea
Comunque l'uso del lardo è proprio antico adesso di utilizza tranquillamente il burro
Non vedo l'ora di andare a Napoli, per gustare tutte quelle bontà
IL BABBÀ BROO
Being italian,seeing everyone loving our food makes me so proud ❤❤❤
Best food in the world, bar none. 😋
“WhEreS My sFoGlIaTeLLa Ive been waiting for 6 hours!!”
my toxic trait is thinking i could do difficult shit like this first try
Overpowered main characters in anime really got a hold on us didnt it?
Well technically you can
u don't have a toxic trait 💀
bruh same
@@mmp8524 ik its just what everyone says
I know the shell is time consuming but the secret is actually the filling. It has to be so specifically done. For me that is the determining factor.
766 likes and no response? Let me fix that
@@Hehehe723
you’re so cool 😐
@@Lifeisbetteronsaturn thanks for saying I’m cool 😁 I appreciate it!
@@Hehehe723
You’re welcome 😑
@@Lifeisbetteronsaturn thanks 😁😁😁😁
"Cwistofer,don't forget the Squeeeadell"🤣🤣
i'm italian and i'm proud of it.
molto bene!! complimenti
underrated channel, your videos are so good
Thank you my friend 🥺❤️ let’s keep liking and sharing ❤️❤️❤️
Love the username too
AYO your me?
@@jackdoesplayyt1718 no i am inside you
Dude literally has over 100k likes have you seen more than 30k people irl, I don't think so
Do love the videos from this guy though
Bro knew what he was doing when he made it that shape💀
I immediately went to the commenta when I saw that 😂
bro its just a cylinder
Is a cylinder now a **Different shape**💀
@@ZYqve same lmao
💀
Cooking isn't hard. Making stuff look perfect and beautiful can be difficult, but anyone can cook anything with enough time and pateince.
"Shfoyadel" -every character on the sopranos
The one pastry that's burns your calorie before you eat it...loved it😊
😂
Didn’t he say that about the croissant
😂
BROOO NO WAY YOU WATCHED THE SHORT TOO??!!!???!?
Fr
It's hard because it's got to be made by Italians using Italian ingredients
Fair point 😁
I know
What utter bullshit! 😂😂
The only downside is it isnt even as nearly as good as other italian breads, yet it is harder and more laborious to make, but successfully making should be rewarding enough
No
I'm impressed how you managed to describe this complex recipe in a simple and efficient way,
wow. Thank you 💕
I love when he says sfogiatella
The way he hold the dough log 💀
🤨
I rush into the comment section after I saw the big white dough 😏
I was searching for this comment 😂
nah you're just dirty, how else did he supposed to hold it?
@@yungbyflw5639 big white what?
Finally, a non-Italian speaker who is able to pronunce "gli" correctly
He’s Italian lol
@mubaraldukhan why does he sound french when speaking Italian tho?
@@Bandicoot_Power might be from region near Switzerland, his accent is different
@@Halaxero I don't really now... being Italian myself I have never heard another native talk with this kind of accent
@@Bandicoot_Power I’ve heard of people who grew up in the mountains who you would think are German. It’s possible maybe he grew up in a French speaking population
That one guy who always past my feed making this pastry...
That Italian chef was really enjoying that bite 😂
One of the hardest ITALIAN pastries to make in the WORLD
Is this proof of a second Italy somewhere else in the world?👀
Way harder to make than the Italian pastries from China
that's among the dumbest sentences I've ever heard
Why does Russian sound like Italian?
@@jaytravis2487 really similar alphabet and pronunciation, despite being similar, you can recognize Russian because it uses harsher sounds than italian and has words mainly made up of consonants
At this point, any bread with many layers are the ones hardest to make😂
Puff pastry = french pastry is hardier
@@watouat1013as a professional baker, this is definitely not a beginner friendly recipe. But puff is def harder. I’d even argue danish is harder. This is a lot more straight forward and the only real risk would be tarring during the rolling process. Which if you’re a decent enough baker would not be too hard
@@watouat1013 hardier?
@@_Jotop i think be meant harder.
@@shr9662making puff french style isnt just hard. Without a rolling table its nigh impossible to truly get 1000 layers without anything breaking along the way (at least in my experience(im a professionally trained pastry chef))
My brain: That looks easy enough
Me making it: THIS IS IMPOSSIBLE!!
Something i really dislike about these videos is that he tells you that it's "THE hardest" dish to make, then he goes on to describe the process of making it without outlining the actual difficulty AT ALL.
I made this for my Italian in-laws. They were so happy. I was like "if this doesn't win them over, nothing will." 🤣
Bro has one of the best quotas I've ever heard
That part where he violated the rolled up lard dough tho💀💀blud stroked it like he knew we’d notice💀💀💀
I’m literally screaming rn IT LOOKS SO GOOD
I love the way you say 'Sfogliatella' because i'm italian and your pronunciation is very accurate 👍🏻
ok :/
@@BaldiReycaster huh?
One thing is sure about Italians: they really know how to make damn good food.
With quality, simple ingredients.
theyre also egotistical as all hell, but hey the pasta's pretty good
@@apersoniguess_what do you mean with egoistical?
@@gregoriocitti4018 It's possibly just in my head tbh, but to me there seems to be a high level of pride in traditional Italian styles of cooking, where western versions of foods are treated as inferior (people dogging on American pizza vs Italian pizza, for example), that and people getting upset when people use substitutes like cream for pastas lol
@@apersoniguess_ou can do whatever you want with food, but if you call a door “chair” you’re an idiot. Same applies to carbonara or pizza
Lard is one of the best things in cusine cuz u can use it for alot of things like frying fries
Louis:baking shit I've never baked before to prove baking is easy🗿
And he proved that baking is easy but hard to be baked perfectly
One of my favorite pastries. With a ricotta and candied orange filling there’s nothing else like it
I gotta give it a go 😍
@@KameraJunior Well, not just candied orange peels, but lemon and cider (similar to a giant lemon that's bigger than grapefruit and has a really thick white part of peel) candied peels aswell. You just cut 'em in 1cm squares and mix 'em in the filling and that's basicly how they make it in Naples which is considered the place they invented sfogliatella. Oh, and another thing... they also love to add orange flour water for the aroma... In Italy orange flower water is like looking for vanilla: it's in any baking section of every supermarket. Definetly worth trying out, the aroma is very delicate and carachteristic, but not overpowering. They also have this custardy pie in Naples called Pastiera and it's also amazing and the filling is very unique: they boil grains of wheat (they soaked up in water the night before) in milk with sugar and cinnamon bars, let it cool, add eggs, ricotta, the above mentioned candied peels and orange flower water and it's unbelivably chunky and runny when you put it in the oven, but it's so soft, creamy, chewy and juicy and I cann't explain it but as days go by, it tastes better and better... 😂 The best thing is if you keep on a room temperature, becouse all the flavours really burst out... 🤤
I loved these before I knew anything about them but their name... which I couldn't pronounce 🤪
Oranges and sand filling sounds crappy
@Automaticguns1 I know what you mean... but there's always rare exceptions to the rule...
Bro really said "one of the hardest Italian pastries to make in THE WORLD"
💀
whats wrong with that
@@unubunright? It’s even hard for us italians too 😂
@@unubunthe Italian is already more restrictive than the in the world
He puts somany food and says hardest HOW MANY VIDS?
Am i the only one who saw beautiful guy in youtube shorts always making these pastrys
The way he said “ slap it in the oven “😂😂😂
As an Italian who mostly likes salty snacks, this is one of my favorite pastries
Non credo che la sfogliatella sia la più difficile da fare, ma ogni cosa con le sfoglie è difficile
His «But why?» is LEGENDARY!
No, it's not. You are just vulgar
This is my favorite information channel tied with oversimplified
Its not the only hardest italian pastries to make but its also the hardest thing for me to say
As an italian,you were amazing!!!♡always following,keep going!
Your support means a lot, thank you so much ❤️
I agree, he makes an amazing Italian! Let's make him an honorary one 🏆
No one is talking about how he was violating the dough 💀😳
Probably cause he wasn't
Because everyone else is semi more mature than you
@@Prototype09 sure lol idc
@@eldersmufcat 👌
expected more comments about it but people here are too normal
that chef zesty tf😭
As an Italian I can say it's one of my favourite pastry
I agree
Piú che altro mi piace la super croccantezza
Vero
Poi un pò anche la crema alla mandorla
as an italian, your "sfogliatella" pronounce is really good!!
A WAR ABOUT PRONOUNCE!
The correct pronunciation is suh-fog-lee-a-tella
Source: I was Caesar in a past life
@@Hexensohn its "sfo-lia-tel-la
its schaweeadell@@Hexensohn
@@cat_567_where's the g
@@cesco7you don't pronounce the g in Italian in this case
ohh that's what the really satisfying chef on TikTok was cooking
Him: "You have to roll it into a tight log."
Me: "💀"
I didn’t expect it to have any filling! This looks phenomenal. There’s so many foods that I want to try.
I come from a New York Italian family and enjoying these on christmas eve is a tradition. Soo so good
Looks so good
as an italian i feel so respected ty
“One of the hardest ITALIAN pastries in THE WORLD”
As an italian, this is accurate. Keep it up
“One of the hardest Italian Pastry’s in the world” lmfaooo
“Baking shit I’ve never backed before: part Sfogliatella“
"it is the hardest Italian pastry to make in the world"😅
Also the hardest to spell and pronounce.
That one Guy that IS so Humble need to do that
Even if he did do this, he wouldn't admit he messed up. For him, as long as it at least vaguely tastes like what it's supposed to, he won.
@@Atlas_Artz whooo
the italian chef vibin to a potato chip💀
Once again, another easy sounding recipe
This Guy's so Underrated
Thank you my friend ❤️❤️🙌
Not only are you telling us how hard it is, you’re also teaching us how to make it!
im sorry, why is it so hard to make? can you enlighten me
I love your videos ❤️
I love how he shows us all how to make it
i love your videos about cakes and pastry🤓
Bro's got better accent than i would ever have
Doing my best ❤️ keep practicing I'm sure you can do better than me!!
I love how he goes from ‘circles’ to ‘fill the circles’ without explaining how to shape them.
Joeyy Brought me Here because MY PLUG SAYS HE LOVES ME
bro saying the name is hard enough 💀
I had my first one in Salerno a few years back and it changed me. Best pastry I’ve ever had. I’ve attempted to make it once but it was so tricky. You’re inspiring me to try again my friend.
"One of the hardest Italian recipes in the world" 😂
Bro said "yes, lard" like its actually a problem
Dude, at this point ANY pastries is hard to make.
Can’t wait for a “why croissants are the hardest pastries to make” 😂
He already did it !!!
What about Pop-tart's toaster pastries?🤔
croissants are actually difficult to make
I sit here and watch these knowing dam well I’m never making pastry’s😭
Don't give up ❤️ you can start with easier ones ❤️
The "But Why" Your Saying Is So Satisfying Now , I Subscibed😊
I first discovered this pastry from a UA-cam shorts dude. He makes it look easy
As an italian im proud of your ending lines
I am convinced no one does not like this man's end lines
SFOGLIATELLA:Im the hardest to make
Crossant:Are you sure about that🤨
It looks good
This is not only the hardest Italian dish, its also the hardest to pronounce fr
Yeeeeah, no there are more difficult dishes to pronounce
I feel like you nailed the pronunciation so well that you cant stop saying the dish name again and again..🤣
I laughed at "one of the hardest Italian dishes to make in the world" as if Italy isn't just in 1 place in the world lol😂😂
That Italian was zesty asf💀💀💀
Italy is my number 1 in must visit list, wanna try all the authentic Italian food & dessert, hopefully soon !!
Choose a food and set your destination.
The canoli is from Sicily. That's an interesting, somewhat unique part of Italy. Might not be best for a first trip, but the canolis are good. You can skip the aranchini.
If you are married, head to the Almafi Coast for limoncello. The island is romantic. Positano is probably the best town on the mainland.
I don't recommend Bistecca alla Florentina, but if it gets you to Florence... Not sure if it's local to Florence, but they have amazing fococcia pizza there. You'll be close to the Tuscan wine region and hilltowns.
I had my best meals in the northern mountains and foothills of the mountains. Not sure if anything was endemic to the area, but all my pasta dishes were excellent.
I had hoped to enjoy the food more in south because my family is from Puglia. Seemed like the further south you go the more likely you'll be served cookies and cake (torte di mandorle) for breakfast.
We waiting for u 💪🏼
Wherever you go, eat local food and you’ll be satisfied. And contrary to what another comment is saying, if you go to sicily eat as many arancini as you can, they’re wonderful☺️
Try cappelletti is a dish we eat on Christmas
Nice, food here is so good!
this channel definitely gonna blow up
Hopefully my friend ❤️
@@KameraJunior it will😎
there a vibe when a channel had a quality content and you are one of them.. we will get 1 mil sub in no time.
“Vito, have a strooyadell”
Bro didn’t miss a chance to say sfogiatella
I feel like we kinda missed the hard bit