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10 traditional snacks from Italy one needs to try

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 20, 2025, 16:00 IST
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1/11

10 traditional snacks from Italy one needs to try

Italy may be known for its pizzas, pastas, and gelato, but between meals, it’s the snacks that truly reveal the country’s heart. Whether it’s something fried and flaky grabbed at a bar with espresso or a small bite shared before dinner, Italian snacks celebrate the simple, good ingredients, no fuss, and flavour that lingers. Each one tells a story of region, season, and tradition, the kind of food made to be eaten with joy, not ceremony. Scroll down for a tour through ten traditional Italian bites that capture the country’s warmth.

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Arancini

Golden, crisp, and filled with creamy rice, arancini are Sicily’s most famous snack. These fried risotto balls hide treasures inside - ragù, peas, cheese, sometimes even pistachio cream. Born as a clever way to use up leftover rice, they’re now a handheld piece of comfort you can find across Italy.

3/11

Supplì

Rome’s answer to arancini, supplì are slimmer, longer, and oozing with mozzarella at the centre. Traditionally filled with tomato-slicked rice, they’re fried till the crust shatters. Romans call them supplì al telefono because when you pull them apart, the melted cheese stretches like an old telephone wire.

4/11

Focaccia

Soft, chewy, and drenched in olive oil, focaccia is Italy’s bread for all hours. In Liguria, it’s brushed with brine before baking to give that salty, irresistible crust. Eat it plain, or tear off a warm piece to scoop up cheese or olives - it’s Italy’s version of edible comfort.

5/11

Taralli

From southern Italy, taralli are tiny, ring-shaped crackers that crunch like breadsticks but taste like wine and olive oil. Some are savoury with fennel or pepper, others are lightly sweet. You’ll find them in every household - packed for travel or served with a glass of wine before dinner.

6/11

Panzerotti

Think of panzerotti as Italy’s portable pizzas - small, stuffed turnovers filled with tomato and mozzarella, folded, sealed, and fried until golden. Born in Puglia, they’re crisp outside and molten inside. Perfect for when you’re too impatient to wait for pizza.

7/11

Bruschetta

Few things taste as purely Italian as toasted bread rubbed with garlic and topped with ripe tomatoes, olive oil, and basil. Bruschetta al pomodoro started as a farmer’s snack to test new olive oil, but it’s now a staple on every aperitivo table - proof that simplicity always wins.

8/11

Crostini

If bruschetta is rustic, crostini is its elegant cousin. Thin slices of toasted bread topped with pâté, mushrooms, or creamy cheeses, these Tuscan-style bites turn a few ingredients into something that tastes far fancier than it looks. Pair them with wine and you have the kind of snack that feels effortlessly Italian.

9/11

Panelle

In Palermo, panelle, crisp chickpea fritters are street food royalty. Made from chickpea flour, water, and salt, sliced thin and fried, they’re served hot inside a soft roll. Humble, cheap, and impossibly addictive.

10/11

Tramezzini

At Italian cafés, tramezzini are the quiet stars of the counter, small, crustless sandwiches filled with tuna and egg, prosciutto and cheese, or artichokes and mayo. Soft, delicate, and best enjoyed with a spritz or cappuccino, they’re Italy’s version of the perfect mid-day pause.

11/11

Castagnole

When Carnevale arrives, Italy’s sweet tooth wakes up - and castagnole are the stars of the season. These bite-sized fried dough balls are dusted with sugar, sometimes filled with cream or ricotta, and best eaten hot, when the inside is still soft and warm.

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Copyright © May 27, 2026, 03.50AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service