La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (2024)

Calabria, food, Italian Culture, italian products, Italy, kitchen

by Vincent Scordo

La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (1)

A friend recently asked me to explain the concept of cucina povera and here’s the workingdefinition I came up with:

A style of cooking best represented, in the past, by the lower class (read: peasants) of a given society. Peasant cooking aims to utilize whatever is found in the kitchen, household, farm, etc. to prepare meals. The concept of cucina povera (literally meaning poor kitchen) can be found in every society and is really about making great food with simple, yet high quality, and available ingredients (including every part of the animal such as cow intestine, pig ears, goat head, etc.).

Both my family in the United States and Italy have made, andcontinueto make, meals in the fashion of cucina povera. That is to say, utilizing both what is contained in the kitchen or pantry and what isn’t too costly at the market in order to prepare meals. In Italy, the kitchen of the poor came out of post War conditions and the generally depressed state of southern Italian life where food choices were limited (regardless of War).

Here are ten examples of cooking in the style of cucina povera:

    1. Tomato salad
    2. Risi e bisi(rice and peas)
    3. Basic pizza/bread
    4. Minestra(vegetable soup)
    5. Pea soup
    6. Rabbit
    7. Broccoli bean soup
    8. Pasta with olive oil, garlic, and parsley(aglio e olio)
    9. Pasta frittata
    10. Salumi

How to Cook in the Style of Cucina Povera

Ask any Italian cook if they aim to prepare foods in the style of cucina povera and you’ll get a laugh, especially from an older person who lived through post War Italy. Both my grandmothers, for example, wouldn’t acknowledge the cucina povera style rather they argued that it was simply the food they had access to and prepared (we’ve only managed to romanticize the style of cooking here in the United States with our countless food choices).

So, my simple advice if you’re looking to cook in the style of, say, the Tuscan peasant or the Calabrian laborer is to keep an Italian pantry (see my list of the top 12 Italian pantry ingredients) that is well stocked and to try and lead a more simple existence (see the 10 things my Italian parents taught me about money); that is to say, cutting out excess and living the Italian way (in the kitchen and elsewhere).

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Tags cucina povera flour pasta pollenta the kitchen of the poor

La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (2)Author: Vincent ScordoLead Italophile (and/or lover of all things Italian).

27 Comments

  1. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (3)

    Rose D., NJ

    December 9, 2010 at 3:50 pm ·Log in to Reply

    It’s as though I’m looking at my own family photos!!! Grazie…

  2. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (4)

    Michelle @ Italian Mama Chef

    December 9, 2010 at 4:06 pm ·Log in to Reply

    Two short stories to share- I tried making Poor Man’s Parmesan which is pasta with toasted breadcrumbs in place of cheese. well we burned the breadcrumbs. lol…kind of funny now.
    And my grandma made a dish that the family called “minestra” but it wasn’t a soup. It was dandelion greens, potatoes, lard or bacon fat, seasonings and polenta. As a child, it made me sick. I wish I could taste that dish now. No one seems to know how to make it in my family.

    • La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (5)

      Prudence

      April 21, 2012 at 1:35 pm ·Log in to Reply

      Michelle,
      “Minestra” as I was taught by my mother-in-law years ago, who by the way is from a town in Calabria called Falerna,

      This is her recipe as follows:
      Ingredients:Greens, potatoes, garlic and olive oil. Salt as needed
      You can use any greens, such asdandelions, chicory, escarole, separately or all together.
      Boil your cut up potatoes first until partially cooked, add your greens with some salt,until they are well cooked,drain in a colander.Using the same pot you boiled potatoes and greens in,add enough olive oil to just cover the bottom of pot, with some chopped garlic. simmer on a low flame
      and then add cooked greens and potatoes. There you go!! Your meal is ready!
      Prudence Gallo

      • La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (6)

        Scordo.com

        April 24, 2012 at 10:44 pm ·Log in to Reply

        Michelle, interesting recipe – thanks for sharing!
        Vince

  3. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (7)

    Scordo.com

    December 10, 2010 at 12:03 pm ·Log in to Reply

    Grappa

    (photo: my father’s collection of grappa; grappa can last several years whenstoredin a cool and dry environment)The Culture and History of GrappaGrappa is traditionally made from grape stalks, seeds and stems (essentially the remaini…

  4. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (8)

    Italian Food and Recipes - Scordo.com

    July 13, 2011 at 2:01 pm ·Log in to Reply

    Recipe: Italian Style Fried Potatoes with Flat Romano Beans and Tomato Paste

    (photo: fried potatoes with flat romano beans, garlic, and tomato paste) You may think that there’s not much of a connection betweenMcDonald’sand rural Italian cuisine but the two modes of eating, however far apart, are connected by the fri…

  5. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (9)

    Italian Food and Recipes - Scordo.com

    October 27, 2011 at 3:20 pm ·Log in to Reply

    Cucina Povera by Pamela Sheldon Johns

    (photo: the author of Cucina Povera,Pamela Sheldon Johns)If you were to tell people that Italy and American have a few things in common you’d most likelyreceivesomeawkwardstares. After all, America is a country driv…

  6. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (10)

    Gabriellamulholland

    April 21, 2012 at 2:57 pm ·Log in to Reply

    may I,? si dice “frittata, aglio” scusa non potevo resistere

    • La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (11)

      Scordo.com

      April 21, 2012 at 5:11 pm ·Log in to Reply

      Grazie!
      Vincenzo

  7. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (12)

    Remocosentino

    July 24, 2012 at 11:22 am ·Log in to Reply

    Vincenzo: listen to your grandmothers: cucina povera is the cuisine of the ordinary Italian, pre- and post war. We ate what the land provided; occasionaly, with the little money that came from our fathers in America, we would buy meat. Calabrian food was rich with greens, beans, home-made pasta and, when available, pork–we all had pigs; also goat and wild birds and rabbits, when my brother-in-law caught them. We did not consider it “poor”. When we came to America we continued to eat much the same foods, except we added chicken, which was plentiful and relatively cheap. I worked in an Italian restaurant during the war in Brooklyn, the only Italian food that was known was “Neapolitan”. Fortunately, the owners were Tuscan and introduced me and my fellow workers to Northern Italian cooking. It was a long time before Americans, and most Italians, learned that there were other kinds of Italian dishes. Now everybody things Northern Italian cooking is “Italian food”. The other truth about cucina povera is that there are no rules: each of us make the dishes in our own unique style.

    Remo Cosentino

    • La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (13)

      Scordo.com

      July 26, 2012 at 11:56 am ·Log in to Reply

      Remo

      Great comments and we always aim to listen to our grandmothers and mothers!

      You are correct about how insular regional Italian cooking was certainly pre-War and to a certain extend post-War (up until the late 1970’s). I’m afraid most cooks in southern Italy “cook” well outside of the region.

      Best,
      Vince

  8. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (14)

    Trent

    October 23, 2012 at 7:59 pm ·Log in to Reply

    Hey Mr. Scordo!
    Are there good books on how to cook and live like this? I have heard that some of the peasants with the least amount of meat/saturated fat are the healthiest in the world in the Mediterranean.
    Thanks!

  9. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (15)

    DomGucci

    November 16, 2012 at 6:47 pm ·Log in to Reply

    Vincent,During the Xmas holidays my mother,who was born in Porto Empedocle,Sicily,used to make a dessert that she called SFINCI which is similar to a Zeppole.She made a batter which included Ricotta.eggs,sugar,vanilla,milk,baking powder and baking soda.She would use a tablespoon and scoop one at a time into a deep fryer.Do you have a Sicillian recipe similar to this?I enjoy your site very much….Thanks Dom G….Florida

  10. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (16)

    Linda Colletti-Bieg

    April 22, 2013 at 9:17 pm ·Log in to Reply

    this is the way we ate growing up. very simple, but delicious

    • La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (17)

      Scordo.com

      May 1, 2013 at 4:47 pm ·Log in to Reply

      Linda, you must have had a great childhood!

  11. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (18)

    Del Martinis

    April 22, 2013 at 9:50 pm ·Log in to Reply

    I’m from Brescia and my mom and her mom cooked like this! I still make polenta and a soup made from bread crumbs, plus white riso with parmesan cheese and browned butter was my childhood favorite and I still eat it.

    • La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (19)

      Scordo.com

      May 1, 2013 at 4:47 pm ·Log in to Reply

      Those items sound wonderful! Brescia is beautiful.

  12. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (20)

    Maria

    April 22, 2013 at 10:45 pm ·Log in to Reply

    We us pig tails and pork neck bones as the base meat for sauce, recipe direct from my grandmother’s kitchen. (Abruzzo) La cucina povera

    • La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (21)

      Scordo.com

      May 1, 2013 at 4:46 pm ·Log in to Reply

      Maria, that must be a great tasting sauce. My grandmother would make a tomato sauce from chicke n parts (leftover parts of course).

  13. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (22)

    Riya Mathur

    April 23, 2013 at 11:25 am ·Log in to Reply

    Cucina povera is not just in italy , its everywhere around world, where poor can’t afford food they will make use of available resources , its saying ” best from waste” ,

    • La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (23)

      Scordo.com

      May 1, 2013 at 4:45 pm ·Log in to Reply

      Good point, Riya.

      • La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (24)

        Riya Mathur

        May 16, 2013 at 6:58 am ·Log in to Reply

        Thanks

  14. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (25)

    Baron DaCosta

    April 27, 2013 at 7:49 pm ·Log in to Reply

    I certainly grew up with the cucine povere giudecca! However, if you are povere, quality of ingredients has nothing to do with it. That is a yuppie revision. You use what you can get.

    I have about a dozen Italian cookbooks, and one of them has a recipe for melanzane povere, but unlike Lidia’s recipe, it has anchovies in the sauce, sauteed and broken down. I can never find the book it is in when I want it! The same for pasta puttanesca. I look through all the indexes and cannot find it!

    I have cookbooks by Catanzaro, Romagnoli, Hazan, Boni, Bugialli, Better Homes and Gardens, Woman’s Day, Culinaria, Silver Spoon and a few others. The Romagnoli’s and Boni are my favorites.
    My mother used a lot of dried herbs to make delicious whatever she was making, whether meat loaf or potatoes.

    • La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (26)

      Scordo.com

      May 1, 2013 at 4:24 pm ·Log in to Reply

      Thanks for the comments. You are correct that the quality of the ingredient in the true cucina povera wouldn’t matter (expect of course if the family was lucky enough to own a small piece of land).

      My grandparents in post war Italy were lucky enough to have a small farm and the ingredients coming out of the farm were pretty exceptional, even during bad times!

  15. La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (27)

    CH Cupinhunter

    April 10, 2014 at 10:00 am ·Log in to Reply

    I find this hysterical because my non-italian big meat eater husband gets frustrated cause all I know how to make is things with beans pasta tomatoes and sometimes cheese! Now I know why:)

    Hey we may have been poor but we are healthy eaters.

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La Cucina Povera or the Kitchen of the Poor (2024)

FAQs

What does La cucina povera mean? ›

Cucina povera is the food the poor of Italy used to cook, dictated by the limited number of ingredients available to them – either what they grew or what little they could afford to buy.

What is the philosophy of cucina povera? ›

Cucina povera recipes are fundamentally frugal, with an emphasis on not wasting food, making more out of less and savouring every ingredient.

What do the poor eat in Italy? ›

Chance and necessity resulted in recipes that reflect Italy's cibo povero (peasant food) tradition.
  • Contemporary Coda alla Vaccinara.
  • Brodetto (Fish Stew)
  • Panzanella With Grilled Mackerel.
  • Chestnut Flour Cake.
  • Tonnarelli Cacio e Pepe.
  • Passatelli in Broth with Chicken and Chicory.
  • Canederli Dumplings.
  • Caciucco (Fish Stew)

What did poor Italian immigrants eat? ›

Here are ten examples of cooking in the style of cucina povera:
  • Tomato salad.
  • Risi e bisi (rice and peas)
  • Basic pizza/bread.
  • Minestra (vegetable soup)
  • Pea soup.
  • Rabbit.
  • Broccoli bean soup.
  • Pasta with olive oil, garlic, and parsley (aglio e olio)

Does cucina mean kitchen? ›

Italian noun

cu·​ci·​na kü-ˈchē-nä : kitchen : cuisine.

What is the meaning of povera? ›

Word forms: povero, povera. adjective. 1. (gen) poor. (stile, scusa) weak.

What is the meaning of La cucina? ›

Cucina (Italian "cuisine" or "kitchen") or La cucina may refer to: La Cucina (film) La Cucina (band) La Cucina (opera) 2019.

What is considered peasant food? ›

What would peasants eat? Focusing on 'living only off what you can grow', the traditional peasant diet was therefore predominantly plant-based, with wholegrains (rice, barley, oats, rye) and vegetables such as potatoes being the main source of nutrition, and legumes providing the primary source of protein.

What is the number 1 food in Italy? ›

Besides pasta, pizza is perhaps the most popular and recognized Italian food. Pizza is considered a national symbol representing Italy to the rest of the world, so much so that UNESCO has acknowledged pizza as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

Is it rude to not eat all your food in Italy? ›

And don't worry – it's not considered rude if you don't completely clear your plate. If you eat all your food while dining in Italy, it's a sign that you want more food, while if you're full and leave a bite of food on your plate, this lets the waitstaff know that you don't want more.

What Italian dish is actually American? ›

Chicken Parmesan, despite the very Italian name, is as American as the hot dog. There's no authentic Italian recipe for combining pasta with chicken, and the two are always served as separate courses.

What is la cucina povera? ›

“It's a type of cuisine that teaches us the value of food and how not to waste it. This is why we have to defend it from extinction.”

Do they put tomato sauce on pizza in Italy? ›

The Toppings

A traditional Italian pizza would just resort to some fresh basil leaves which, together with the red tomato sauce and the white Mozarella di Bufala cheese complete the tri-colour of the Italian flag. However, depending upon the mood, one can sprinkle some oregano and fresh olive oil for a hint of spice.

Where is cucina povera from? ›

At Eataly, we find inspiration in cucina povera, the no-waste “poor cooking” tradition from rural Italy. From bruschetta to biscotti, many of the most ingenious products and dishes that we savor today were invented out of necessity by peasants over hundreds of years, who made the most of simple ingredients available.

Why is it called Arte Povera? ›

Arte povera means literally 'poor art' but the word poor here refers to the movement's signature exploration of a wide range of materials beyond the traditional ones of oil paint on canvas, bronze, or carved marble. Materials used by the artists included soil, rags and twigs.

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