Mortadella Bologna
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The word “mortadella” dates back to
the Roman period. According to some sources, it derives
from “Mortarium” (mortar), an instrument which was used
to mash pork. The production of Bolognese sausage, however,
can be located in an area of great Roman influence and
which extends from Emilia Romagna to the region of Lazio.
In fact mortadella is the most well known cold-cut of
the Bolognese tradition, with historical origins dating
back to the 16th century. In recent times the original
production area has extended also to neighbouring areas.
As from the late Renaissance period, the presence of mortadella
on Italian tables is widely evidenced by the many literary
and historic witnesses. A rather picturesque curiosity
is linked to cinema: Mario Monicelli’s film “La Mortadella”
shot in 1971, where Sophia Loren, a Neapolitan country
girl goes to New York to meet her boyfriend. She is stopped
at the airport because of a chunk of mortadella, whose
importation in America was prohibited.
Consumption
The Bolognese sausage can be eaten
in many different ways. It can be sliced in little cubes
and served with fresh vegetables and cheese, or it can
be finely sliced and used as a stuffing to flavour typical
dishes which are meat-based or rustic timbale.
Conservation
As all cold-cuts, if sliced the mortadella
must be eaten in a short period to avoid that it becomes
dry. If purchased air-tight it is necessary to preserve
it in a refrigerator to maintain its aroma and colour.
Production
The production technique for the Mortadella
Bologna is unique: it starts as mashed meat, treated according
to a specification recognised on a European level, and
which is mashed and reduced to a creamy emulsion following
different phases in different meat grinders (the last
type of grinder is significantly called “extermination”).
Cubes of fat are then prepared, mainly from gullets, which
supply the most hard and prized of fats. The result is
packed in desired measures (mortadella is available in
all sizes: from 500 grs to 50 Kg) in natural or plastic
packing and which then undergoes a boiling phase. This
phase is the most delicate, which gives the mortadella
its characteristic aroma and its typical softness: the
process also foresees the use of dried air furnaces, with
cooking times which can last a few hours to a whole day.
What follows is a cold water shower and a period in cold
cells, which allows the product to stabilise itself.
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