Discovering Umbrian food was a massive highlight of our week in Umbria with Our Whole Village. Everybody knows Italian food is like, but food in Umbria has its own specialities and local flavours. We dined incredibly well during our week and have the expanded waistlines to show for it. So a look at the food, recipes, classic dishes and regional specialities of Umbria in central Italy.
The Food of Umbria
I will never look at shop bought pasta the same way again after trying fresh, home-made tagliatelle and ravioli at our farmhouse cookery class, all arranged through Our Whole Village. Freshly made pasta is a million miles, in terms of flavour and texture, from the pasta most of us normally consume.
Umbrian food has Etruscan roots and is very rustic, relying heavily on the ingredients found in the area. Umbria has rich soil, forests, abundant farmlands and lakes, the produce is sensational and dishes rely on simplicity and seasonal availability. A dish will typically highlight a single, quality, ingredient. It’s peasant food, but peasant food done well is the best food there is, I think.
Everything starts with the basics, grains, good olive oil and the herbs that grow so abundantly in the Umbrian hills. Add to this Umbria’s star ingredients as their seasons come around and you’ve got some outstanding local dishes.
Truffles in Umbria
Truffles, both black and white, are found wild in the area. We were luck enough to go on a truffle hunting expedition with dogs, a unique experience with rich rewards.
We sampled truffles on pasta and risotto, in cured meats and in cheeses, always used in great abundance and always delicious.
Autumn and winter in Umbria is the time to visit for truffle festivals and markets, but the kitchen diamonds are available all year round.
Umbrian Meat Dishes
Pork and wild boar were the kings of the table during our stay, but lamb and other game are also big favourites in the region.
Umbria has a long history in the arts of butchery, cured meats are a specialty and local top-quality meats are produced with pride. Wild boar from the woods is so popular and abundant that whole shops are dedicated to boar products..
Wild boar salami with fennel or with truffles were part of our antipasti and were a hit with adults and children.
Porchetta, although not exclusively Umbrian, is the street food of the region. Whole, boned slow-roasted pigs, stuffed Umbrian-style with offal and herbs, typically including wild fennel and garlic is sold from vans at roadsides and in markets across Umbria.
We tried it in a panino on the streets of Gubbio. It comes heavily salted, it’s not what your doctor would recommend, but it tastes pretty good.
Umbrian Chocolate
The Perugina chocolate factory, founded in 1907 is international popular and famous for Baci chocolate, made with ground hazelnuts and dark chocolate. Unfortunately Nestle now owns the factory, but there is a museum featuring the original machinery used for the production of Perugina chocolate. Perugia holds the Eurochocolate chocolate fair every October.
Umbrian Wines
Umbria has great growing conditions and wine production in the region goes back to ancient times.
I’m no wine expert, but the wines we sampled, many from traditional Umbrian grapes, were really rather nice. You can read up on the Wines of Umbria here.
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More Blog Posts From Umbria
If you’re planning a trip to Umbria, you must try all of the amazing Umbrian dishes in this post, but also check out these highlights of Umbria which will be near you.
- The Gubbio Funivia – a cable car ride with a difference.
- Saint Ubaldo and his Basilica See the mumified saint.
- Visiting Assisi – this is an absolute must-do in Umbria!
- A Cooking Class in Umbria with kids.
- Hunting black truffles, with dogs, in Umbria, and finding many!
- The villa we used in Umbria
In just a week we saw some fabulous Umbrian dishes, dining opportunities were very much built into our trip. The dishes were all about simplicity and showcasing a particular ingredient to fully highlight its flavour. We enjoyed rustic bean soups, creamy courgette gazpacho and fresh tasty salads as well as the specialities mentioned here. It’s hearty peasant food at its finest and you could never go hungry in Umbria. Want to read more about Umbria? See
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Believe me when I tell you how hard it is for me to read this post when I’m hungry!! I’m a big fan of exploring the food scene of a country I visit and I would love to try a cookery class in Italy, which is probably one of my favourite European destinations for food! And a whole chocolate fair – I think I might be visiting in October 🙂
Awesome food and great post, Thanks for this wonderful and awesome post. Loved it to the fullest. I am very happy that I found this during my search for something concerning this.
Regards
Jagbir Sandhu
OMG yum yum yum yum!
Yum, the chocolate looks awesome and the pasta. I love Italian food, it’s definitely my favourite!
This looks all so very yummy! I was in Umbria is 2010 and we loved it so much, and said we’d love to go back.
These pictures are delicious, I can smell and imagine the taste with no problems. Italian food is among the best in the world!
The olive oil was our favorite thing in Umbria! We stayed in Trevi and it was amazing. The pasta looks great!
Oh my goodness that all looks amazing! I really need to force myself to start liking cheese or I’ll miss out on some fab food.
Okay, here I am in Thailand, the land of yummy food, and you are making me miss that yummy Italian food! Oh, I could just dive into that first picture and eat it all up. It looks like you had a wonderful time.
It’s funny that you mentioned the porchetta. We just discovered that the nondescript little coop grocery store in the nondescript little town closest to our Italian rental villa has a whole roast pig out in the meat section on weekend afternoons. A serious looking woman in a white coat stands at a table with the head sitting on the table at one end and the tail at the other end hacking off pieces of the middle with a giant cleaver as the shoppers come by. The kids were absolutely fascinated! The food in this place is just amazing.
They were everywhere, the little white vans. Side of the road in the middle of nowhere, every market place. Must admit, when I ate mine I did’nt realise it was stuffed with heart and lungs, I thought it was stuffing. Blegh!
Oh dear, I put on two kilos just by looking at all those marvellous foods!
Oh wow, it all looks so yummy! Anything Truffles or porchetta…double servings for me please. To go truffle hunting would have been such a fun experience. I’d fly back to Italy just for that. It all sounds and looks amazing. It just wish I could at least smell it. Maybe the computer gurus should be working on that 🙂