Breakfast

Pane Fritto (Fried Bread)

by:
May  6, 2014

Every Tuesday, Italian expat Emiko Davies is taking us on a grand tour of Italy, showing us how to make classic, fiercely regional dishes at home. 

Today: Give your French toast an Italian makeover with this fried bread from Friuli.

 

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Day-old bread is a staple ingredient across the whole of Italy. It never goes to waste in peasant cuisine, perhaps because loaves of bread were traditionally blessed in religious ceremonies (making it sacrilegious to throw it out). In Tuscany, it's turned into thick soups or torn into salads. In Trentino, it's made into dumplings. It is whizzed into breadcrumbs and it's made into focaccia-like cakes, both sweet and savory, from north to south.

This is just another way to not waste good stale bread. But, as traditionalists note, use bread that is one day old, not more. Known as pane fritto in Italian or schnitte in dialect, this snack or dessert (or breakfast, depending on how you look at it) from the region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia is as simple as can be. Think of it as French toast, but with a few small tricks.

There are two main ways this is enjoyed in Friuli. One is a version known as pan dorato (golden bread), where the day-old bread slice is passed first through sweetened milk, then beaten egg, and then finally coated in breadcrumbs. It's fried and has a super crunchy texture outside, thanks to the breadcrumbs.

The second way to do this is the classic schnitte; the bread slice is passed through sweetened milk, then placed in a mixture of egg, lemon, and white wine. The bread is then fried in butter, oil, or lard, and then served hot, sprinkled in sugar. It's delicate, fluffy, and wonderfully tart. Another traditional way to do this is without the lemon -- and the plain pane fritto is then drizzled in the Friulian version of vincotto (“cooked wine”, a sweet, dark, thick reduction of must, the leftovers of the wine harvest).

Pane Fritto or Schnitte (Fried Bread) 

Serves 4

4 thick slices of day-old bread (a rustic country loaf with a dense crumb is best)
3/4 cup or 200 milliliters milk (or as needed)
1/4 cup or 50 grams sugar, plus more for serving
1 egg
Juice and zest of 1/2 lemon
A splash of white wine
2 tablespoons butter

See the full recipe (and save and print it) here.

Photos by Emiko Davies

See what other Food52 readers are saying.

  • Sophia R
    Sophia R
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  • Droplet
    Droplet
The Australian-Japanese cookbook author has lived in Florence (where a visit to a cheese farm once inspired her to start a food blog) for over 10 years with her Tuscan sommelier husband and two kids. Her third cookbook, Tortellini at Midnight, is out now.

3 Comments

Sophia R. May 7, 2014
This is so intriguing Emiko - I had never even heard of an Italian version of French Toast. Also 'Schnitte' is spelt identical to what we call a Sandwich or Tartine where I grew up in Germany - I would love to know how that word ended up across the Alps and being used to describe French Toast. Incidentally, French Toast is called 'Arme Ritter' (literally, poor soldiers) in Germany.
 
Tracy E. May 6, 2014
Hello! My husband and I are going to Positano in September...any places to dine that we shouldn't miss? Thank you!
 
Droplet May 6, 2014
It always amazes me how multifaceted the simplest of recipes can be as you rediscovered them in different places across the globe. Thank you for a great column, Emiko :)