Ribollita

Italian bread soup From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ribollita (lit.'reboiled') is a Tuscan panade (a variety of bread soup) made with bread and vegetables, often from leftovers.[1] There are many variations, but it usually contains cannellini beans, lacinato kale, cabbage and inexpensive vegetables such as carrot, beans, chard, celery, potatoes and onion. It is often baked in a clay pot.[2]:36

CoursePrimo (Italian course)
Place of originItaly
Region or stateTuscany
Quick facts Type, Course ...
Ribollita
TypeBread soup
CoursePrimo (Italian course)
Place of originItaly
Region or stateTuscany
Main ingredientsBread, cannellini beans, vegetables
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Like most Tuscan cuisine, the soup has peasant origins. It was originally made by reheating (or reboiling) large amounts of minestrone or vegetable soup leftover from the previous day with stale bread. This occurred most frequently on Fridays, as it was eaten as a fasting food.[3][4] Some sources date it to the Middle Ages, when the servants gathered up food-soaked bread trenchers from feudal lords' banquets and boiled them for their dinners.[1] The dish is first documented in 1910, in L'arte cucinaria in Italia by Alberto Cougnet [it].[5]

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