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Pizza...a unique dish in the world

Napoli, Italia ★★★★☆ 187 views
Aurora Beneduce
Napoli
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About Pizza...a unique dish in the world

Pizza...a unique dish in the world - Napoli | Secret World Trip Planner

If today we can enjoy this dish, a symbol of Made in Italy and the Mediterranean diet, it is thanks to a glorious past that allowed pizza to spread throughout the world. The ancient Egyptians are credited with the discovery of yeast, capable of making doughs soft and light after baking. Thanks to the discovery of America, the tomato imported from faraway Peru in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies arrived on pizza.

Pizza...a unique dish in the world - Napoli | Secret World Trip Planner

Pizza in Naples

Pizza has distant historical origins and we can find traces of it as far back as the late 1500s. There are historical traces that reveal that in the ancient suburbs of Naples the flatbread was called pizza. To make the classic schiacciata more appetizing, Neapolitan cooks began to spread a mixture of lard, coarse salt and garlic or caciocavallo cheese and basil on it, in the rich version.

Pizza...a unique dish in the world - Napoli | Secret World Trip Planner

The arrival of the tomato

In the 1700s the tomato imported from Peru arrived on pizza. At that time oil had already replaced lard and we approach a version very similar to today's recipe. It was at this stage that this dish began to spread, finding popularity abroad as well. Thanks to Italians migrating abroad, pizza began to be cooked all over the world. From Naples to America, the leavened dough was served with tomato and mozzarella.

Why we call it Margherita

The historic crowning achievement came in 1889, when King Umberto I and his wife Margherita visited Naples. Raffaele Esposito, considered the best pizza maker of the time, served the pizza to the sovereigns. Queen Margherita, appreciated the taste of the dish so much that she thanked Esposito in writing. The Neapolitan pizzaiolo to reciprocate the sovereign's thanks named the pizza with tomato and mozzarella after the queen. It was then that Pizza Margherita was born.

The spread in Italy in the postwar period.

After World War II, another phase of expansion of this dish began. This is the time when many southerners begin to move north in search of work, and with them comes pizza in large industrial districts, such as Turin and Milan. After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War, this dish is exported to countries such as Germany, Japan, the Middle East, Eastern countries and China.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Pizza has distant historical origins tracing back to the late 1500s in Naples, where flatbread called pizza was prepared in the ancient suburbs. Neapolitan cooks began enhancing the classic schiacciata with mixtures of lard, coarse salt, garlic, caciocavallo cheese, and basil to make it more appetizing.
The tomato arrived on pizza in the 1700s after being imported from Peru to the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. At this time, oil had already replaced lard in the recipe, creating a version very similar to today's classic pizza, and this is when the dish began spreading in popularity both domestically and abroad.
In 1889, the renowned pizzaiolo Raffaele Esposito served pizza to King Umberto I and Queen Margherita during their visit to Naples. Queen Margherita appreciated the dish so much that she thanked Esposito in writing, prompting him to name the tomato and mozzarella pizza after the queen, thus creating Pizza Margherita.
The ancient Egyptians are credited with discovering yeast, which revolutionized pizza-making by creating soft and light doughs after baking. This fundamental ingredient became essential to the development of pizza as we know it today.
Pizza spread globally primarily through Italian migration, particularly after World War II when many southerners moved north and abroad in search of work, bringing the leavened dough with tomato and mozzarella with them. This diaspora transformed pizza from a regional Neapolitan specialty into a symbol of Made in Italy and the Mediterranean diet worldwide.