Pastiera

Updated April 22, 2025

Total Time
5 hours
Rating
4(14)
Comments
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Naples is an ancient city, with a history that goes back at least to the classical Greeks. Relics of the old spring-planting festivals show up in Easter cooking, like the grains of wheat, swollen with milk and sugar, folded into the filling of pastiera, a magnificent Easter pie. —Nancy Harmon Jenkins

Featured in: Easter in Naples: Mangia Bene!

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Ingredients

Yield:Two 9½-inch tarts

    For Soaking

    • cups soft, spring whole-wheat berries (see note)
    • 1teaspoon lard
    • cups milk
    • 1cup granulated sugar

    The Dough

    • cups all-purpose flour
    • ½cup granulated sugar
    • ½teaspoon salt
    • Zest of 1 lemon, grated (optional)
    • ½cup sweet butter at room temperature
    • 4 to 5tablespoons ice water

    The Filling

    • 12ounces ricotta
    • Zest of 2 lemons, grated or slivered
    • 1tablespoon orange-flower water
    • 1teaspoon vanilla
    • cup candied orange peel, finely slivered
    • 5large egg yolks
    • 3large egg whites
    • A little butter and flour for the tart pans

    To Finish

    • 1additional egg, lightly beaten, for brushing dough
    • Granulated sugar for sprinkling on top
Ingredient Substitution Guide
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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Soak the wheat berries in plenty of cold water for at least 3 days, or until they soft and not rubbery, changing the water daily. Drain well. Put the wheat, lard and milk in the top of a double boiler and cook, covered, over boiling water for about 2½ hours. Be sure to add boiling water to the botton pan every 20 to 30 minutes. (The wheat should be soft and in separate grains, like rice. If the wheat seems dry, add about ⅓ cup more hot milk and stir well. Timing will vary depending on the age of the wheat berries.) Add the sugar and continue cooking another 30 minutes. Set aside to cool. The milk will continue to be absorbed as wheat cools.

  2. Step 2

    To make the pastry dough, combine the flour, sugar, salt and lemon rind in a bowl. Add the butter, cut into little pieces, and mix quickly, using your hands or a pastry blender. Mix in the ice water just until the dough holds together. Knead briefly to combine thoroughly, wrap in plastic wrap or foil and set aside to rest in a cool place for about 30 minutes.

  3. Step 3

    In a large bowl, combine the ricotta with the lemon zest, orange-flower water, vanilla, candied orange peel and egg yolks. Mix well and fold in the wheat. Set aside.

  4. Step 4

    Lightly butter and flour the bottoms and sides of two 9½-inch tart or quiche pans with removable bottoms. Set aside about a third of the pastry, enough to make lattice tops for the two tarts. Roll out the pastry into thin circles and line the bottoms and sides of the tart pans.

  5. Step 5

    Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Beat the egg whites until they are fairly stiff. Stir about a quarter of the egg whites into the ricotta mixture to soften, then fold in the remaining egg whites. Fill the tarts with the mixture. Roll out the reserved dough and cut into lattice strips to fit the tops of the tarts. Paint the tops of the tarts with the beaten egg and sprinkle with granulated sugar. Bake in the oven for 45 minutes, or until the crust is just golden. Cool on a rack and serve at room temperature or just barely warm.

Tip
  • Wheat berries should be available in health-food stores or specialty food stores. If unavailable, barley may be substituted. Because it is a softer grain, barley will need only about 1 day of soaking and about 45 minutes of cooking before the sugar is added.

Ratings

4 out of 5
14 user ratings
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This is a project! First, I cut the recipe in half so that may have been a problem, but I noticed that the milk is not absorbed by the wheat berries and the amount of milk that is leftover would make the filling too watery. So seeing a possibility of making ricotta soup I drained the berries before folding them into the ricotta mixture. I am hopeful this will

I've been making a similar version of this recipe for years A must for Easter in my Italian home! But I use a shortcut & use a can of cooked wheat found in Italian specialty stores or on line.

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Credits

Adapted from Carlo Middione’s “Food of Southern Italy”

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