Ziti Pasta from Gragnano PGI, cut and smooth - 500g

€6.90
Tax included
Ziti are a smooth and hollow pasta shape . Tradition states that ziti must be long-shaped and should be broken before being cooked....
This product is:
  • PGI - PDO - Slow Food
  • Product for Vegetarians
  • Product for Vegans
  • Non perishable
  • Lactose free
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Ziti are a smooth and hollow pasta shape. Tradition states that ziti must be long-shaped and should be broken before being cooked. “Pastificio dei Campi” has already cut them for you and turned them into a short pasta shape. The name ziti comes from the word “zite” which was how unmarried women who were in charge of preparing pasta with Neapolitan ragout on Sunday morning were called. As a matter of fact, the most common sauce pairing for this pasta is this ragout, although they are also delicious baked with sausages and scamorza cheese.

Ziti pasta from Gragnano PGI by “Pastificio dei Campi” is made from durum-wheat semolina grown in the company’s fields in Apulia. The product specifications established by the PGI certification mark - which the city of Gragnano has obtained in 2013 - state that pasta must be extruded through bronze dies; this is an artisan technique allowing for a rough pasta surface which best absorbs sauces. “Pastificio dei Campi” carries out a manual processing with the purpose of only making prime-quality pasta, following local traditions from Gragnano, where pasta has been produced since the 16th century.

The Ziti pasta from Gragnano PGI is packaged in cardboard cases only made with recyclable materials, to respect the environment and the territory and to guarantee high-quality raw materials.

ZitPdc

Data sheet

Region
Campania
PGI - PDO - Slow Food
Yes
Product for Vegetarians
Yes
Product for Vegans
Yes
Perishability
Non perishable
Lactose free
Yes

We understood that ziti pasta’s quintessential dressing is Genoese sauce, but if you don’t have a day off to think about it there are also less demanding alternatives.

Ziti pasta with seafood

Let’s stay on the Amalfi coast for this sea-flavoured recipe. Mussels, clams and shrimps cannot be missing, but if you find razor clams, squid and cockles they’re great as well. 

Ziti pasta with zucchini pesto

A fresh and light version, but especially fast, of the classic ziti pasta. The pesto is prepared in the pasta’s cooking time, but first of all the zucchini are grated with a large-holed grater and then drained in a colander for at least 30 minutes. 

Then mix all together with pine nuts, basil, Parmigiano Reggiano cheese, Pecorino Romano cheese, a clove of garlic without the core and abundant olive oil. 

Blend until you get a smooth and homogeneous consistency and the pesto is ready. Before serving, you can add raw tomato, pine nuts or – even better – some fried zucchini, because it’s ok to stay light but let’s not exaggerate. 

Tony Soprano’s baked ziti pasta

A fantastic recipe, not quick nor light to make, but a real masterpieceTony, the Sopranos’ householder, loves it!

To prepare this sauce we need beef pulp, sausage, pecorino cheese, fresh and hard-boiled eggs, breadcrumbs, tomato pulp, buffalo mozzarella, then basil, oregano, parsley, wine to blend, salt, pepper and oil. 

First of all prepare the meatballs using meat, pecorino cheese, breadcrumbs, fresh eggs and parsley. Once ready, fry them and then put them on a paper towel.

In a pan add oil, garlic and sausage, sprinkle with the wine, add tomato sauce, basil and oregano and let it all simmer (“pippiare”, remember?) well, for at least 40 minutes. 

Once the ziti are cooked drain them and proceed to the preparation of the bowl: a layer of tomato sauce, a layer of pasta, meatballs, hard-boiled eggs, mozzarella, pecorino cheese and tomato sauce, then start over with pasta, meatballs, hard-boiled eggs, mozzarella and pecorino cheese, repeat until all the ingredients are finished. Add a sprinkling of pecorino and Parmesan cheese and put in the oven at 200° for 20 minutes.

Ziti are a long, smooth, tubular and hollow pasta shapeThey have to be broken in half before cooking and legend has it that on Sunday morning, in the alleys of Naples, a careful ear can catch the noise of the ziti pasta breaking.

It is the first quintessential course of wedding banquets as well as a consolation dish for emigrants in distant lands (see The Sopranos), ziti are simply one of the most traditional pasta formats of Campania. 

 

Ziti pasta, a format for brides…

Let’s start from the name, which comes from “zita” or “zito”, which means girlfriend or boyfriend in Neapolitan. Ziti are, in fact, the pasta of lovers, meaning that the preparation begins pre-wedding and ends with the party itself. 

A pasta that seals the love, so to speak. Traditionally, the almost-bride prepared the sauce before the ceremony and the first forkful was up to the newlyweds. It was sort of a test of the new bride’s culinary skills, put under examination on the day of her wedding.

 

…or for the unmarried?

A little less romatic, the second theory on the ziti’s name refers to the “zita” which is the old maid, a lonely woman without a man. Which, in a way, makes perfect sense. Only an old maid, not having a husband to think about, can have the time to prepare the real Neapolitan ziti pasta

The classic dressing for ziti pasta is, in fact, “Genoese sauce”, a white ragout that has nothing to do with Liguria expect for the name. It takes a long time to make, because the sauce must simmer (or, as they say in Naples, pippiare) very slowly to shrink and condense all the flavours. Estimated cooking time: 5 hours minimum.

If we want to keep it light, just season with the sauce, if we want to overdo it then we can also bake them in the oven, with a nice sprinkling of Parmesan, breadcrumbs, mozzarella and a few flakes of butter. Surely not light, but definitely exceptional.

 

“Pastificio dei Campi”, the true Gragnano pasta

We already talked about the most typical pasta shapes for the greatest traditional recipes and we have seen how ziti pasta and Genoese sauce are inseparably linked

We are talking about one of the most complex, elaborate and traditional dishes of our country. A great recipe needs an amazing pasta and our choice could only be Gragnano’s

Pastificio dei Campi is our guarantee for a top quality pasta, bronze-drawn and dried slowly and naturally. 

The wheat used is of the most ancient varieties and comes from the Table of the Apulias, where it is grown without the use of glyphosates or chemical fertilizers. 

The crops follow the ancient three-year rotation technique to avoid the impoverishment of the soil and ensure ears with high nutritional values. The traceability is total: from the farmer to the packaging, every package of “Pastificio dei Campi” pasta tells its whole story. 

Recensione prodotto.

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