Italian Flour Types

00, 0, 1, 2, integrale โ€” what Italian flour numbers mean and which to use for pizza, pasta, and bread.

Tipo 00

Must-See
Finest grindWhere/Type
The silkiest flourKey fact

Ultra-refined, low protein (8-11%). Used for fresh pasta, pastry, and Neapolitan pizza. Not a "strength" indicator โ€” it's a fineness grade.

Tipo 0

Must-See
Fine grindWhere/Type
The all-purpose flourKey fact

Slightly less refined than 00. Italian all-purpose equivalent. Used for bread, pizza, and general baking.

Tipo 1 / Tipo 2

Must-See
Medium/coarseWhere/Type
Wholemeal-ishKey fact

More bran and germ retained. Nuttier flavour, more nutrition. Used for rustic breads and some pasta.

Semola Rimacinata

Must-See
Durum wheatWhere/Type
For dried pasta & Southern breadKey fact

Re-milled durum wheat semolina โ€” yellow colour, high protein, essential for orecchiette, cavatelli, and Pugliese bread.

Farina Integrale

Must-See
WholegrainWhere/Type
Full wholemealKey fact

100% of the grain. Used for health-focused baking. Less common in traditional Italian cooking but growing in popularity.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro tip: For Neapolitan pizza at home, use Caputo Pizzeria flour (Tipo 00, high protein/gluten). For pasta, use Tipo 00 soft wheat or semola rimacinata for southern shapes.

Where to start

Visit a mulino (mill) in Tuscany or Emilia-Romagna for stone-ground flour โ€” the difference in flavour vs supermarket flour is dramatic.

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