Italian Carnival Food: One Fried Dough, Twenty Regional Names, and Why Every Version Tastes Different
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
The Italian Carnevale season — running from Epiphany (January 6) through Shrove Tuesday (Martedì Grasso), the day before Ash Wednesday — is the period when Italian pastry shops produce the annual collection of fried sweets that exist only for these weeks and that are simultaneously the same thing everywhere and completely different everywhere. The basic Carnival sweet is a sheet of enriched dough fried in oil and dusted with powdered sugar. In Lombardy it is called chiacchiere (chatter). In Rome it is frappe. In Tuscany it is cenci (rags). In Venice it is galani. In Piedmont it is bugie (lies). In Liguria it is bugie or crostoli. In Emilia-Romagna it is sfrappole. In Veneto it is crostoli or galani depending on the specific area. They are all made from eggs, flour, sugar, butter, and a flavoring (usually lemon, orange, or grappa), rolled thin, cut in strips or rectangles, fried until golden, and served cold under a snowfall of powdered sugar.
The taste differences between these regional variants are subtle but real: the Venice galani uses slightly different leavening from the Lombard chiacchiere; the Roman frappe traditionally adds white wine to the dough; the Piedmont bugie often contains rum. The differences reflect regional ingredient availability and historical influences as much as deliberate differentiation. But the broader point — that this specific sweet exists at Carnival season in every Italian region under a different name, as if each region independently invented the same fried dough — is actually the kind of cultural unity through variation that defines Italian food culture.
Regional Carnival Sweets Beyond the Fried Dough
Castagnole (widespread)
Small round fried dough balls, often flavored with lemon or orange, sometimes filled with custard (crema pasticcera) or ricotta, dusted with powdered sugar or soaked in a sugar syrup. The name suggests chestnut but the ingredient is dough; the shape is chestnut-adjacent. Castagnole are particularly associated with Rome and Lazio, where they appear in pasticcerie from January through Carnival Tuesday. Filled versions (with cream or ricotta) are more elaborate than the plain version and more closely associated with the final days of Carnival.
Frittole / Fritole (Venice and Veneto)
Fritole are small round fried dough fritters — like castagnole but made with a yeast-leavened dough that produces a lighter, more irregular texture. Traditional Venetian fritole contain raisins and pine nuts; modern versions also include filled versions with custard cream. The fritole al fritto is the classic street version, sold by paper cone from market stands during Carnevale di Venezia. The tradition of fritole in Venice is documented from at least the fifteenth century; the fritoleri (fritole sellers) were a recognized guild.
Zeppole (Naples and South)
The zeppola is technically a Saint Joseph's Day pastry (Feast of San Giuseppe, March 19, at the very end of or just after Carnival season), but the Carnival-season versions of zeppole filled with custard cream are common throughout Campania and southern Italy from January through March. The classic zeppola di San Giuseppe is a choux pastry ring filled with custard and topped with a sour cherry; the fried carnival version is a simple fried dough ring. Naples's pasticcerie produce both simultaneously during this period.
Migliaccio (Naples)
Migliaccio is the Neapolitan Carnival cake — a semolina and ricotta tart flavored with orange zest and cinnamon, firm enough to cut in slices, traditionally made on Carnival Thursday (Giovedì Grasso). It is not fried; it is a baked tart of considerable richness. The name derives from the Latin word for millet (the ancient grain that originally made the base) though modern migliaccio uses semolina. Pasticceria Poppella and other Naples historic pastry shops produce the definitive versions.
Q&A: Frequently Asked Questions
When is Italian Carnival season 2026?
Carnival season 2026 begins January 6 (Epiphany) and ends March 3 (Shrove Tuesday, Martedì Grasso). The most intense period for Carnival sweets in pastry shops is the two weeks before Martedì Grasso — roughly mid-February through March 3. The Venice Carnival (which runs for approximately ten days ending on Shrove Tuesday) attracts the most international attention but is far from the only Italian Carnival worth experiencing.
Where is the best Italian Carnival celebration besides Venice?
Viareggio (Tuscany): enormous papier-maché floats, the largest Carnival outside Venice in Italy. Ivrea (Piedmont): the Battle of the Oranges, a unique ritual in which twelve teams on foot throw oranges at nine teams in horse-drawn carts for three days. The event requires wearing a red hat to avoid being targeted. Putignano (Puglia): the oldest Italian Carnival, dating to 1394, with elaborate floats and weeks of celebrations. Cento (Emilia-Romagna): the only Italian Carnival formally twinned with the Rio de Janeiro Carnival.
Are Carnival sweets available outside Carnival season?
Generally no. The seasonal character of Italian Carnival sweets is part of their meaning — they exist for these weeks and then disappear until the following year. Some bakeries produce chiacchiere in small quantities year-round for commercial reasons, but the quality and the atmosphere are specific to the season. Eating a fresh chiacchiera from a Milanese pasticceria in February, warm from the oil with powdered sugar on your coat, is qualitatively different from eating one in July.
What Nobody Tells You
The Roman frappe and the Lombard chiacchiere are made with slightly different wine additions to the dough — white wine in Rome, grappa or sparkling wine in Lombardy — and the resulting texture differs: the Rome version is slightly crisper, the Lombard version slightly more tender. This difference is not marketing; it is a genuine regional variation of the same basic recipe maintained over generations. Blind tasting can reliably distinguish region of origin.