Prosciutto di Parma Dop

Two thousand years of history testify
the success of the Prosciutto di Parma: Marco Terenzio Varrano,
in the 1st century B.C. presented the inhabitants of the
Gallia Padana as being great experts in the production of
pork hams, in his “De Rustica”, so expert that the hams
were exported to Rome. Even the writings of historians such
as Polibio, Strabone and Catone il Censore confirm this
term. An epigraph which can be seen at the Capitoline Museums
recites the menu of the day: chicken, fish and ham. The
Longobards were consumers of savage pork meat which was
salted and transformed in ham, lard and sausages, but the
Longobards of the Pianura Padana were eased by the use of
salt because they could extract it from the saline sources
such as those of Salsomaggiore, near Parma. Here, in particular
environmental conditions, natural and human which characterise
the area, the Prosciutto di Parma finds its historical origins,
whose ham was later diffused in Italy and the world.
Consumption
The best way to taste the refined taste
of the Prosciutto di Parma is by slicing the ham and eating
it raw, or accompanied with bread or melon, figs and exotic
fruits. Both white and red wines perfectly accompany this
ham: the red wines of Toscana, the whites of Veneto or Alsazia,
and the wines of Lorena and last but not least, champagne.
If the ham is to be consumed at lunch, white wine is more
indicated, if it is served at supper red wine is better
recommended.
Conservation
Once the bones have been taken off, the
Prosciutto di Parma can be conserved for 6 months in a refrigerator,
at a temperature between 4 and 8°C. Only whole ham with
the bones can be hung in rooms at a temperature of 17 to
20°C, until 12 months; once it is cut it must be kept in
a refrigerator for a month, and must be wrapped in a transparent
foil. If the product is pre-packed, it can be kept for at
least 3 days at temperature of 1 to 4°C.
Production
Fresh hind legs must not weigh
less than 10 kg, while the end product must weigh between
8 to 10 kilos and not less than 7. After slaughtering, the
hind legs are isolated and put in cellars at a temperature
of 0 for 24 hours. Trimming follows, with the exportation
of fat and of the pigskin to favour the salting phase and
to confer the typical shape of a hen’s leg. Successive salting
has a duration of 21 to 25 days, and a resting period for
two or three months favours the penetration and distribution
of the salt. After washing, the pre-maturation period starts,
which is effected in big rooms with windows where the hams
are hung to so-called “scalere”. The hams are put in lard
to soften the superficial striations and towards the seventh
month the real maturation period starts, with the transfer
of the hams in fresher and less ventilated areas; during
this period operations called “sondaggio" occur. At the
12th month the hams are sealed with the Ducal Crown, in
respect of the requisites of the production regulation.
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