Sardenaira (also known as pissalandrea, pizza all'Andrea,[1] piscialandrea, pizzalandrea,[2] pissadella[3] or sardenaira[4]) is a pizza dish, without cheese, from the Liguria region of Italy.[5] It is very similar to the pissaladière.[5][6][7][8] Although termed a pizza, some consider it more akin to a focaccia.[8]

Sardenaira

In the city of Sanremo, in western Liguria, it is garnished with salted anchovies, local olives, garlic cloves, and capers.[6]

It is known as sardenaira or pizza all'Andrea, after admiral Andrea Doria (1466–1560), whose favorite food was the dish: a slice of bread with olive oil, garlic, and salted anchovy.[7][8]

The dish predates the better-known Neapolitan pizza.[7] Since the dish was created before the Columbian exchange, traditionalists do not add tomatoes.[7]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Pizza all'Andrea (pissalandrea), su Agriliguria. URL consultato il 22 dicembre 2018".
  2. ^ Guarnaschelli Gotti 2007, p. 850.
  3. ^ Guarnaschelli Gotti 2007, p. 849.
  4. ^ Guarnaschelli Gotti 2007, p. 854.
  5. ^ a b Elizabeth David, Italian Food (Penguin, 1987), p. 126–28.
  6. ^ a b Elizabeth David, A Book of Mediterranean Food (2002), p. 39.
  7. ^ a b c d Anna Del Conte, Gastronomy of Italy (Pavilion, 2013) (revised ed.).
  8. ^ a b c Laura Giannatempo, A Ligurian Kitchen: Recipes and Tales from the Italian Riviera (Hippocrene, 2006).