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Tiramisu
Italian dessert
Italian dessert
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | Tiramisu | |
| image | Tiramisu - Raffaele Diomede.jpg | |
| image_size | 250px | |
| alternate_name | , | |
| country | Italy | |
| region | {{plainlist | |
| course | Dessert | |
| served | Cold | |
| main_ingredient | Savoiardi, coffee (regular or espresso), egg yolks, mascarpone, cocoa powder, Marsala wine, sugar |
- Veneto
- Friuli-Venezia Giulia
Tiramisu is an Italian dessert made with coffee-soaked ladyfingers (savoiardi) covered with a cream of egg yolks, sugar, mascarpone, and cocoa powder.{{cite web |access-date=2025-11-29 |access-date=2025-11-30 |access-date=2025-11-29
History
Tiramisu seems to have been invented in the late 1960s or early 1970s, but where and when exactly is unclear. Some believe the recipe was derived from sbatudin, a simpler dessert made of egg yolks and sugar. Others argue it originated from another dish, {{ill|dolce Torino|it|Dolce Torino}}.
The tiramisu recipe is not found in cookbooks before the 1960s. It is mentioned in a Sydney Morning Herald restaurant column published in 1978. It is not mentioned in encyclopaedias and dictionaries of the 1970s, first appearing in an Italian dictionary in 1980, and in English in 1982. It is mentioned in a 1983 cookbook devoted to cooking of the Veneto region.
Obituaries for the restaurateur Ado Campeol (1928–2021) reported that it was invented at his restaurant Le Beccherie in Treviso on 24 December 1969 by his wife Alba di Pillo (1929–2021) and the pastry chef Roberto Linguanotto (1943–2024). The dish was added to its menu in 1972. At the time of his death in July 2024, the Le Beccherie restaurant credited Linguanotto as the creator of the tiramisu.
It has been claimed that tiramisu has aphrodisiac effects and was concocted by a 19th-century Treviso brothel madam, as the Accademia Del Tiramisù explains, to "solve the problems they may have had with their conjugal duties on their return to their wives".
There is evidence of a tiremesù semi-frozen dessert served by the Vetturino restaurant in Pieris, in the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region, since 1938. This may be the name's origin, while the recipe for tiramisu may have originated as a variation of another layered dessert, zuppa inglese. Others claim it was created toward the end of the 17th century in Siena in honour of Grand Duke Cosimo III.
On 29 July 2017, tiramisu was entered by the Ministry of Agricultural, Food and Forestry Policies on the list of traditional Friulian and Giulian agri-food products in the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region. In 2013, Luca Zaia, President of Veneto, sought European Union protected status certification for the dessert, based on the ingredients used in 1970, so substitute ingredients, such as strawberries, could not be used in a dish called tiramisu.
Traditional ingredients and early composition
Traditional tiramisu contains ladyfingers (savoiardi), egg yolks, sugar, coffee, mascarpone, and cocoa powder. Several of these components were already well established in Italian domestic cooking. Savoiardi were commonly used in traditional desserts and spoon cakes, while egg-based creams such as zabaglione have a long culinary history in northern Italy. Coffee was also used in combination with egg-based creams in Italian pastry by the late 19th century, as shown in Sorbiatti’s recipes (1873).{{cite book
Variations

The original tiramisu served at Le Beccherie was round. Modern versions are often made in a rectangular or square pan, making it easier to arrange the biscuits.
A common variation is to add alcohol to the coffee that the savoiardi are soaked in. Common choices include coffee-flavoured liqueurs such as Tia Maria and Kahlúa, Marsala wine, amaretto, dark rum, Madeira, port, brandy, Malibu or Irish cream.
Modern versions sometimes have whipped cream or whipped egg whites, or both, combined with mascarpone. This makes the dish lighter, thick and foamy. Another variation involves the preparation of the cream with eggs heated just enough to pasteurize the mixture without scrambling the eggs. The cake is usually eaten cold.
Numerous variations of tiramisu exist. Many replace the coffee with other ingredients such as chocolate, amaretto, lemon, strawberry, pineapple, yoghurt, banana, raspberry, and coconut. Some cooks use other cakes or sweet, yeasted bread, such as panettone, in place of the ladyfingers. Bakers living in different Italian regions often debate the use and structural qualities of utilising other types of cookies, such as pavesini for instance, in the recipe.
Notes
References
References
- "Tiramisù". Accademia Italiana della Cucina.
- Kington, Tom. (2013-08-23). "Save the tiramisu, says Italian politician". The Guardian.
- Squires, Nick. (17 May 2016). "Italian regions battle over who invented tiramisu". The Telegraph.
- (1 November 2021). "Ado Campeol, at whose restaurant tiramisu was invented, passes away at 93".
- Leigh, Wendy. (1 April 2023). "Before Tiramisu Was Officially Created, It Was Sbatudin".
- Lim, Heather. (7 May 2023). "The Original Tiramisu Recipe Has No Heavy Cream Or Marsala".
- Artusi, Pellegrino. (1991). "La scienza in cucina e l'arte di mangiar bene". Giunti.
- (1998). "La Marca gastronomica: amore e nostalgia per la cucina e i vini di nostra tradizione". Canova Editore.
- Cremona, Luigi. (2004). "Italia dei dolci". Touring Editore.
- Lane, Trevor. (30 August 1978). "The Irish in Paddington". The Sydney Morning Herald.
- (1981). "Enciclopedia Europea Garzanti".
- (1971). "Enciclopedia Universale Rizzoli Larousse".
- (1980). "Dizionario della lingua italiana Garzanti".
- "Il Sabatini Coletti. Dizionario della Lingua Italiana".
- "Tiramisu". Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary.
- Capnist, Giovanni. (1983). "I Dolci Del Veneto". F. Muzzio.
- (1 November 2021). "Ado Campeol, at whose restaurant tiramisu was invented, passes away at 93".
- (11 November 2021). "Pochi giorni dopo Ado Campeol, il papà del tiramisù, muore anche la moglie Alba Di Pillo, la vera ideatrice del dolce dei record". La Repubblica.
- (30 October 2021). "'Father of tiramisu' Ado Campeol dies aged 93". [[BBC]].
- Vozzella, Laura. (8 October 2006). "The Unsung Inventor of Tiramisu". [[The Baltimore Sun]].
- Black, Jane. (10 July 2007). "The Trail of Tiramisu". [[The Washington Post]].
- Robeldo, Anthony. (July 30, 2024). "Father of Tiramisu Roberto "Loli" Linguanotto dies at 81, leaving 'sweet legacy'". USA Today.
- "THE ORIGIN OF TIRAMISÙ: "FACT AND LEGEND". ⋆ Accademia Del Tiramisù".
- "History of tiramisù".
- (2004). "L'Italia del caffè".
- "Diciassettesima revisione dell elenco dei prodotti agroalimentari tradizionali".
- (29 July 2017). "GU Serie Generale n.176".
- Hernandez, Joe. (31 October 2021). "Ado Campeol, the man known as the 'father of tiramisu', has died". [[NPR]].
- (23 August 2013). "Save the tiramisu, says Italian politician".
- "Italian Politician Asks EU To Grant Tiramisu Protected Status".
- "Savoiardo".
- "Żabaióne - Significato ed etimologia - Vocabolario".
- Smith, F. W. G.. (1935). "Cheese Making". Ernest Benn Ltd..
- "Il "Mascherpone", una storia trevigiana che inizia nel 1933 da valorizzare con il Tiramisù".
- (2023-10-01). "Cison rivendica la paternità del mascarpone: «Marchio registrato nel 1933»".
- Pinarelli, Caterina. (2020). "Il mascarpone artigianale, specialità lombarda".
- "Ricetta Storia Tiramisu – Recipe and Story of Tiramisu".
- Cloake, Felicity. (13 March 2014). "How to make the perfect tiramisu". [[The Guardian]].
- Greenspan, Dorie. (14 June 2016). "The way to make a tiramisu even more unforgettable". [[The Washington Post]].
- ''Larousse Gastronomique'', New York: Clarkson Potter Publishers, 2001, p. 1214.
- (14 October 2016). "Tiramisù: pavesini vs savoiardi, chi vince?".
- Wilbur, T.. (2006). "Top Secret Restaurant Recipes 2". Penguin Publishing Group.
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