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Examples

  • In the central square of the board, a man is shown standing between two suspended sausages as big as his head: “Long live the mortadelle of Bologna,” the caption reads.

    Delizia! John Dickie 2008

  • Store in a well-ventilated place until spring, making sure that the mortadelle do not touch anything, even each other.

    Delizia! John Dickie 2008

  • In short, everyone seems to have made mortadelle of one kind or another.

    Delizia! John Dickie 2008

  • In 1661, the cardinal-legate who ran Bologna on behalf of the pope issued a proclamation against people “who show so little love for the public good that they arrogate themselves the right to make mortadelle containing some beef.”

    Delizia! John Dickie 2008

  • A recipe for mortadelle in the Venetian Book for Cook uses boiled pork liver, cheese, and eggs.

    Delizia! John Dickie 2008

  • This misdemeanor was particularly damaging to “the talent for making exquisitely perfect mortadelle that this City has enjoyed since ancient times my italics.”

    Delizia! John Dickie 2008

  • Amid the plastic vines and grapes of the display that surrounds him, magnificent string-bound sausages sit alongside framed copies of the cardinal-legate’s 1661 proclamation against butchers who adulterate their mortadelle.

    Delizia! John Dickie 2008

  • Platina’s Respectable Pleasure tells us that Master Martino used to spit-roast mortadelle the size of eggs made from fatty veal haunch seasoned with marjoram, parsley, and spices, and bound with egg yolk and cheese.

    Delizia! John Dickie 2008

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