Angelo Motta (8 September 1890 – 26 December 1957) was an Italian entrepreneur, and founder of the food company Motta. He is associated with the commercial production of the sweet yeast bread panettone.
Angelo Motta | |
---|---|
Born | Gessate, Lombardy, Kingdom of Italy | 8 September 1890
Died | 26 December 1957 Milan, Italy | (aged 67)
Occupations |
|
Biography
editMotta was a Milanese pastry chef before leaving for military service during the World War I. After the war, in 1919 he opened his first bakery and started the production of the panettone, a typically Milanese cake, first in the form of a handmade version and later expanding his production to make panettone at an industrial plant. Motta and his rival panettone maker Gioacchino Alemagna are credited with the industrialisation of panettone from its Milanese origins to a staple of the Italian Christmas. Production had expanded considerably by 1930 and a new large factory was required on the outskirts of town to replace the four small bakeries that Motta was using. In 1935, l'illustrazione italiana reported that the new factory had a conveyor belt measuring thirty metres and large industrial ovens to keep up with production.[1]
Motta's contribution to panettone was to create a distinctive high dome shape for his bread that replaced the older style of flatter panettone as the standard. His startling success saw his company expand considerably during the interwar years, with Motta Foods introducing new bread, including a celebratory Easter bread known as a colomba pasquale, a dove-shaped yeast bread that uses panettone yeast but contains less fruit.[1] In many companies,[which?] panettone became the de rigueur holiday gift to give to staff. Top artists were commissioned by Motta to immortalize his bread in advertisements. Prices were slashed to attract yet more consumers.[2] It is estimated that panettone is now sold in seventy-five countries.
After the war, Motta's company also manufactured ice cream, including the famous brands Mottarello and Coppa del Nonno (lit. 'Grandfather's Cup'). Motta's continued as an independent company until 1970, when it became state-controlled.
The Motta and Alemagna brands are now owned by Bauli,[3] an Italian bakery company based in Verona,[4] having previously passed through the hands of Nestlé for a period in the late 1990s.
He died in December 1957.
Awards
editIn 1939 Angelo Motta was awarded Knight of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre, a prestigious Catholic chivalric order.
Motta was also a Grand Officer of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Stanisloa Porizo, Il panettone. Storia, leggende, segreti e fortune di un protagonista del Natale, Datanova, (2007). ISBN 9788895092317.
- ^ Alexandra Richardson, Panettone: the Quintessential Italian Cake and not only at Christmas!, Winter 2009 The Magazine of the British-Italian Society
- ^ "Bauli: Pandoro, panettone, colomba, dolci a lievitazione naturale, merende, cioccolato". Archived from the original on 2012-08-13. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
- ^ "Bauli acquires Motta and Alemagna from Nestlé". 22 September 2009.