As early as 1549, Cristoforo di Messisbugo, a chef from Ferrara, cites the recipe of a sweet bread made from flour, butter, sugar, eggs and milk, created in Milan. This is the ancestor of today’s famed panettone. The legend boasts of the regal origins of this sweet, the result of a Christmas Eve culinary error in the kitchens of Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan. The chef of the Sforza residence apparently burned the dessert planned for the banquet and the scullery boy, known simply as “Toni”, seeking to remedy the tragedy, decided to use the yeast he had put aside for his own Christmas. He worked it over and over again with flour, eggs, sugar, raisins and candied fruits, until he had a light highly-risen dough and a new creation which totally amazed Sforza who, in honour of its creator, decided to call it “pan de Toni”, eventually evolving into the name “panettone”. Forgetting about the legend, the one sure thing is that the preparation of the panettone goes back to a habit of the people of the Middle Ages to furnish their tables with the richest breads on certain occasions, such as for the Christmas tradition of the “rito di ciocco”, a sort of re-enactment of the last supper. It wasn’t until 1606 that the sweet was officially mentioned in the first Milanese-Italian dictionary which speaks of a certain “panaton de danedaa”.
Adrian Piper. Adrian Piper and racism in contemporary visual culture traitor
The first European retrospective in over twenty years dedicated to Adrian Piper, conceptual artist, minimalist and performer in the New York art scene of the late Sixties.
Through a series of installation interventions, spanning works of art and exhibition elements, Haris Epaminonda presents a symbolic journey in comparison with the historical avant-gardes of Futurism.
The exhibition presents an in-depth and original approach to Brassaï’s oeuvre through over 200 vintage prints, with particular attention to the extremely famous images dedicated to the French capital and its nightlife.
Bulgari Debuts Summer Collection at Milan Fashion Week
Summer fashion in our sights. Milan Fashion Week saw the debut of Bulgari's summer Leather Goods & Accessories collection at the Bulgari boutique, as well as ...