The King of Biscotti: Almond Biscotti “Cantucci”
In Italy desserts are often flavored with honey, chestnuts, pine nuts, hazelnuts and almonds. Cantucci originated in the Tuscany and it is thought that they were flavored with almonds from Prato. They can be found in every pasticceria in the Tuscany. Cantucci are mostly eaten with a glass of “Vin Santo” a sweet wine. Many restaurants serve small almond biscotti with coffee and some will have a bowl of them on the table at all times. It is probably the most well-known and popular biscotti in Italy.
Following is our family recipe for cantucci. Make a full recipe and stored in a metal container, they will last a few weeks. They can be frozen up to two months – they defrost very quickly. You will always have biscotti to serve with coffee when friends drop by.
If this link doesn't connect, go to http://turosdolci.wordpress.com
http://turosdolci.wordpress.com/2009/08/01/almond-biscotti-“cantucci”-recipe/
Comments
I love biscotti, but I get an error when I follow the link.
could you re-check your link and maybe re-post... the one you have provided returns an error message. I'd love to see the article in question!
thanks
ben
I love vin santo and biscotti after dinner. Although I was always more partial to ricciarelli with my vin santo, probably because I was living in Siena when this ritual was even possible.
When you get the error page, click on the bread link on the right and scroll down a couple entries. It's a good write up.
Eric
there isn't any "bread" link to the right so I Googled the recipe with the info that was posted. Here is the link to their family recipe...
http://www.nowpublic.com/style/king-biscotti-almond-biscotti-cantucci
Delicius!
This is my italian recipe:
http://croce-delizia.blogspot.com/2009/11/cantucci-tozzetti-biscotti-di-prato.html
Thank you for your recipe and comments. I also have a recipe using filberts which I will post at some point in time. I'll bookmark your blog andit will be so much fun reading it in Italian. I'm planning to spend a few months in Italy this winter looking for some new recipes. Hope others will read your recipe and give it a try.
Thanks again,
Patricia
Great recipe! I made this today, and it turned out quite wonderful.
Thanks!
I'm so glad you tried it and liked it. It is one of my families recipes. It is a one of the most ordered biscotti in our business. They freeze really well also and last for a few months. When freezing, it is best to freeze the loafs before cutting them. They stay fresher and defrost very quickly.
Thanks for the feedback.
Patricia
actually cantucci are made using NO butter, oil or fat.....
I thought that biscotti (by definition) were baked twice.
Is there a missing step (a second bake to dry out the cut cookie)?
bis (2 times) cotti (cooked) twice cooked.
the wodk biscotto, in italian, refers to any type of cookie - biscotto di cioccolato - chocolate cookie, for example
biscotto, as used in the usa, really refers to cantucci - that are indeed baked twice