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Italian Cured Meats: Complete Guide

The Italian food and wine tradition is characterized by genuine products that are bound up with the territory and whose origins are often very ancient.

Italian cured meats are the flagship of Italian traditional cuisine. These products are meat derivatives and differ from one another in transformation and processing methods.

Pork is what is mainly used in cured meats, but we can also find other excellent products consisting of white turkey or chicken meat, horse meat, beef or game.

Although they are not properly dietetic products, nowadays Italian cured meats production takes advantage of all the improvements made in terms of farming techniques, animal feeding and the choice of raw materials.

Cured meats in Italy and in the world: an ancient history

An inscription relating to a kind of salami was found on the tomb of Ramses III; even though it was in Classical Greece when the first sausages were produced, and we even find them mentioned in Aristophanes’ plays.

In Italy, the first processed forms of sausages appeared during the Roman Empire: we can find references of that in the work of Cato the Censor, Juvenal and Horace – in his “Satires”. Meat – either pork or wild boar – was salted and stored in wooden barrels.

It seems that Romans were so fond of ham that, according to Varro, they also imported it from Cisalpine Gaul. Even the very appreciated mortadella was born in the late Roman period in ancient Bononia and was originally made of pork and myrtle.

We find the first mentions to cured meats in the Middle Ages, with reference to salt-preserved products. However, it was only in the Renaissance when the first pork butcheries – called “norcinerie”- were born together with the Corporations which were responsible for regulating the production of cured meats. Cardinal Girolamo Farnese himself decreed which meats and spices should be used in making them.

In the 19th century the first semi-artisanal workshops were opened, but it was only in the 60s when cured meat factories (salumifici) spread, combining innovation and tradition.

Italian Dry Cured Meats

The main dry cured meats – i.e. sausages made with fresh meat that is subjected to different conservation processes and techniques – are:

  1. Dry cured ham (prosciutto crudo): it’s the Italian cured meat par excellence, produced with selected pork legs, which can be aged for up to 16 months. A characteristic process is that consisting in applying lard around the ham bone to prevent the meat from drying too much.
  2. Salami: it is one of the oldest Italian cured meats, made with minced meat and several spices. Among the best known specialties we find: Napoli, Milano and Felino PGI salami.
  3. Speck: is a cured meat produced with the pork leg that is first smoked and then cured. Its flavor is given by spices such as nutmeg, juniper berries and bay leaves.
  4. Bresaola or Cured Beef: this cured meat –deriving from the leg of beef– is strictly dry-processed with spices. Rich in protein and low in fat, it is ideal for those on a diet.
  5. Capocollo Ham: this pork cold cut is prepared using the pork’s neck muscles and its preparation is similar to that of dry-cured ham.
  6. Culatello Ham: prepared with the pork thigh deprived of the rind, then defatted and aged for at least 10 months. Among its most famous admirers, there was Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi.
  7. Lard: a food that Michelangelo used to really enjoy whenever the work took him to Carrara, lard is obtained from the back of those pigs which have big muscle mass.
  8. Bacon or Pancetta: this pork cold cut is prepared with the meat from the belly of pigs and there are different versions, from the classic to the smoked or spicy ones.

Boiled Ham

The famous Prosciutto San Daniele DOP is originally from Friuli Venezia Giulia, a territory that is blessed with the alpine air and sea breeze. Prosciutto di Parma DOP, instead, is produced in the Province of Parma. Other excellences include Sauris PGI dry cured ham –produced in the province of Udine– and Jambon de Bosses PDO –originating from Saint-Rhémy-en-Bosses in the Aosta Valley.

Bresaola (Cured Beef)

Bresaola PGI is produced in Lombardy, Valtellina: it derives from beef meat and the finest cut is called “Punta d’Anca”. In Valtellina, they also process meat from the French Charolaise and South American zebu breeds. After being put in brine for 15 days, meat is stuffed into a natural gut casing and then left aging.

Culatello Ham

The production area of Culatello Zibello PDO is Bassa Parmense. The meat cuts used to prepare the culatello are finer; the trimming is strictly done by hand and the seasoning – of at least 10 months – takes place in cellars or in premises with controlled humidity and temperature.

Speck

Speck Alto Adige PGI is produced in Trentino Alto Adige, in the autonomous province of Bolzano. Originally treated as a kind of food usually consumed by poor people, speck is produced with the pork leg which is opened and massaged with a mix of spices. The meat rests in the brine and then is smoked with mild smoking woods such as beech, juniper or ash wood.

Capocollo or Coppa

Coppa di Parma PGI is a cold cut meat produced exclusively in the provinces of Emilia Romagna and Lombardy. It is obtained from the meat located in the cervical tract of adult pigs (from breeds such as White Landrace and Duroc). The “Disciplinary of the Protection Consortium” indicates the allowed ingredients and the processing stages, from trimming to maturing.

Italian “cooked” cured meats

By cooked cured meats we mean those sausages produced with meats subjected to various cooking processes – but without altering their organoleptic properties. Among the main cooked cured meats there are:

  1. Baked ham: this is a relatively “recent” cured meat, with important nutritional qualities and produced from boneless pork legs which are salted and cooked in special ovens at 75°
  2. Mortadella: its unmistakable scent and the pink color dotted with white spots of lard, make this sausage one of the most beloved. The production techniques of this product are as ancient as they are unique
  3. Cotechino: this cooked salami is a typical Christmas holiday food – it is traditionally consumed with lentils on New Year’s Eve. It is produced with lean pork minced and mixed with natural flavorings and spices
  4. Zampone: also considered a typical Christmas food, it is a cured meat created with pork, spices, salt and rind, and then stuffed into the pig’s front leg skin
  5. Ciccioli: typical of Emilia Romagna, they come from the scraps of fatty and lean meats that are melted together creating a lard-like product. They are sold dried or softened

Baked ham

The main production areas of cooked ham are Lombardy, Friuli Venezia Giulia, Liguria, Piedmont and Emilia Romagna. It comes from the pork leg and its preparation consists of numerous steps. The first historical traces were found in Herculaneum and Pompeii excavations, where remains of a ham and some pork recipes were found.

Mortadella

Mortadella di Bologna PGI is mainly produced in Emilia Romagna, together with Tuscany, Lazio, Marche, Veneto and Lombardy. Pork meat is finely chopped, mixed with lard and various spices (such as pepper and pistachio), stuffed and then steamed in air stoves.

Cotechino (trotter)

Produced in the Modena area, Cotechino PGI has a history that goes back to 1510. During the siege of Mirandola –by the armigers of Pope Julius II della Rovere– the cook of Pico della Mirandola slaughtered all the pigs in order not to leave them in the hands of the enemies and in so doing he created the first trotter in history.

Salame Cotto (boiled salami)

This sausage –originating from Savona, Piacenza, Lazio and Piedmont areas– is produced with the pork shoulder, with lean parts and meat scraps from other pork processes. Once the meat is minced, bacon (or lard), spices and flavorings –such as wine or mint– are added. Then it is stuffed in a casing and steamed.

Zampone (ham hock)

Zampone di Modena PGI is produced throughout Emilia Romagna, in Lombardy and in the Veneto provinces of Rovigo and Verona. It differs from cotechino by the type of casing used. Here, the casing is made out of the leg skin of the pig which releases fat during cooking.

Conclusion on the Best Italian Cured Meats

Tasting one of the many Italian cured meats means not only satisfying all the senses – first and foremost the palate -, but also paying homage to the long Italian history and culture in the food and wine field.

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