The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Holiday sweets with an Italian touch

Chef’s childhood favorites translate into Christmas treats for your dessert tray.

- By C. W. Cameron

Caterina Scarano grew up in Mottola, Puglia, in southeaste­rn Italy. She remembers her mother and her aunt getting together starting weeks before Christmas to make traditiona­l sweets. “Every weekend, they would get together and make so many sweets. We’d be together all day, some of us baking, some playing cards or bingo. As children, we would gather around the adults and ‘steal’ some of the dough to play with or eat raw. The smell of citrus, honey and sugar is still in my memories,” she said.

She remembers the Christmas season as two weeks of family reunion. “Christmas is a very important holiday for us. We get together, make food, share food and listen to the adults tell stories about their childhood.”

The family would gather at her house or that of her aunt and prepare focacce con cipolla e olive, the traditiona­l Puglian onion and olive pie. “On Christmas Eve, we would get together and eat focacce, play bingo, then go to church at midnight. When we got back home, we’d eat a little more, then everyone goes to sleep and we get up on Christmas Day to make fresh pasta for Christmas lunch.”

Scarano came to the United States in 2014 when her husband’s job offered the opportunit­y for the couple to travel abroad. They started out in San Diego, then moved to Atlanta in 2015. That year, she took a job with Storico Fresco, where she learned she was good at working with doughs and making pasta. She also gained experience as a pastry chef there. The pull of nostalgia made her want to share the recipes of her childhood, and she opened Caterí Authentic Italian Food in April 2019.

For her company, she prepares focacce, grissini and crostate filled with homemade chocolate-hazelnut paste or strawberry jam, all traditiona­l dishes from Puglia, as well as other baked treats, filled pastas and lasagna.

And as she works, she remembers back to her childhood kitchen. “I was always there helping. My auntie would show me how to knead the dough and shape the purcidduzz­i. She would even let me help some. The purcidduzz­i are a favorite, the one sweet that was a staple of our Christmas.”

For our readers, Scarano reproduced some of these recipes from her home and that of her hus

band. The Cuscini di Gesú Bambino are a traditiona­l dish of Puglia. “We would buy them from bakeries or make them at home. They are basically a simple sweet turnover with a chocolate stuffing. Usually the stuffing is made with nuts, but I like these made with chickpeas.” Like many Italian desserts, the cuscini are sweet, but not overly so.

Hazelnuts are a popular nut from the Piedmont region of Italy, and Scarano and her Brutti Ma Buoni take full advantage of their rich flavor. These cookies are the sweetest of Scarano’s recipes she shared with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, but the roasted nuts and toasted sugar make a cookie that’s richly flavored but not cloying. Scarano learned to make these when she met her husband and moved to northern Italy.

And her panettone truffles pay homage to thrifty cooks everywhere. “Panettone (a brioche-type yeast bread) is a staple of our Christmas. It’s never homemade. The recipe takes days to make and over 50 hours to rise. It’s a long process, so you buy from a bakery. But when you go to someone’s home, they will always serve panettone. After the holidays, everyone has leftover panettone. The truffles were born as a way to use up those leftovers.”

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