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This is Father’s Day in Italy.
Comment “recipe” and I’ll send you how we make them.
Every year, on March 19th, Italy celebrates San Giuseppe, Saint Joseph, and it also happens to be Father’s Day. But in Tuscany, especially around Florence, this day has a very specific smell: warm oil, sugar, and fresh frittelle.
Frittelle di San Giuseppe are one of the most traditional Italian desserts, deeply rooted in Tuscan cuisine and Italian cultural heritage. In Florence, Saint Joseph is often called San Giuseppe frittellaio, Saint Joseph the fritter maker, because of this long standing tradition of making fried sweets to celebrate the day.
When I was a child, this was one of the moments I waited for all year.Me, my nonna, hours in the kitchen, making dozens and dozens of these soft, golden, sugar coated fritters. It takes time, patience, and a lot of hands.. but that’s exactly what makes it special.
In many small Italian towns, there are even frittelle festivals, where people gather to celebrate with traditional sweets, street food, and family recipes passed down through generations. It’s not just about dessert. It’s about community, tradition, and sharing food together.
These frittelle are part of authentic Italian food culture, gluten free recipes, traditional Italian desserts, and Mediterranean celebrations. Made with simple ingredients, they represent Italian home cooking, festive baking, seasonal recipes, Italian gluten free sweets, and the beauty of slow food.
If you’re searching for Italian desserts, Tuscan recipes, traditional sweets, fried dough recipes, homemade desserts, authentic Italian cooking, festive recipes, gluten free Italian desserts, easy gluten free recipes or classic Mediterranean treats, this is one of the most meaningful ones.
This is not just a recipe.It’s a memory I’ve been living every year since I was a child.
👉 Comment “recipe” and I’ll send it to you.
Buon appetito Sunshine ☀️

46 Comments

  1. Raccomando la nipote di tenere d'occhio quella bottiglia, esiste il rischio di ritrovarsi una nonna su di giri 🤪🍾

  2. Abuela inviteme a comer un día a su casa y a conocer a esa nieta tan guapa. Saludos desde Galicia España ❤😍😉

  3. As an Italian, I can tell you that these are Tuscan rice fritters (frittelle di riso Toscane) and are usually not prepared during Father's Day, but instead the zeppole of St. Joseph are prepared which are totally different. In fact, Father's Day falls on St. Joseph's Day.

  4. Tu l'hai fatto sodo eh? Tipical tuscany accent…❤❤❤ I love frittelle,I am italian and my mother did it today(usually she made them the 19 of march for fathers day) ..they were delicious! Just like nonna made!

  5. I miss my nonna,she did very good frittelle,but without vinsanto.. Also my mother makes them good but she thinks they are not as good as my nonna

  6. Beautiful example family love enjoy your special time with Grandma and blessings for you and her and thank for sharing this with us lovely ladies

  7. Never say Italians,cause dishes in the North and in the South are completely different…. I'm Italian, Alpine area, but I have never seen or tasted that!

  8. In Hungary, we usually bake this kind of rice mixture in the oven and serve it with fruit syrup. This is a new version for me, but I’m going to try it. Thank you!❤

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