DI MARTINO ELICOIDAL PASTA GRAGNANO IGP - 500GR
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
It represents one of the many variants of macaroni, whose origin is not linked to the certainty of a particular region, but it is very likely that it is Campania.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced in Gragnano, the capital of pasta south of Naples, the quality seal I.G.P (Protected Geographical Indication) has been assigned to the seven historical pasta producers of the city using ancestral production processes.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced in Gragnano, the capital of pasta south of Naples, the quality seal I.G.P (Protected Geographical Indication) has been assigned to the seven historical pasta producers of the city using ancestral production processes.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced in Gragnano, the capital of pasta south of Naples, the quality seal I.G.P (Protected Geographical Indication) has been assigned to the seven historical pasta producers of the city using ancestral production processes.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
Produced according to the traditional method used in Gragnano, slow drying at low temperature, to enhance its taste and absorb the sauces.
The term ("Paccheri" in Neapolitan means "schiaffo") could recall the noise, which evokes a slap, caused by the sauce when it seasons this type of pasta.
These pastas make you feel on holiday, in a restaurant overlooking the sea, with a dish of pasta seasoned with squid, mussels, shrimps, clams, shells and fresh and fragrant octopus.
This special variety of tomatoes is cultivated on a hill, at an altitude of more than 500 meters, in the Val Fortore and precisely in the municipality of San Bartolomeo in Galdo.
The Pelati PomoBio come exclusively from organic crops of South Italy
Store obtained from healthy and mature fruits, cut into fillets and canned with peel, in tomato juice.
The Torrente Rosse gems rich in sun, stripped by the skins with the traditional process of scalding in boiling water and immersed in their juice, fill the air with perfume every time a can of Pomodori Pelati La Torrente.
A Naples and Campania “friarielli”, in Rome “broccoletti”, in Tuscany “rapini” and in Puglia, “cime di rapa”.
The yellow tomato has a sweeter and delicate taste, it is rich in beta-carotene and is an excellent antioxidant.
Sweet, rich in antioxidants and exquisite even without seasoning: because of the fame of this extraordinary fruit of the earth is certainly not a mystery.