Italian Food to Bring Home

The best things to bring home from Italy are things you can eat, drink, or use daily. Here's your guide to food.

Hard cheeses (Parmigiano, Pecorino)

Must-See
Vacuum-packed at any cheese counterWhere/How
€8-25/kgBudget

Hard cheeses travel perfectly — ask for "sottovuoto" (vacuum-packed) at any alimentari or supermarket. Parmigiano, Pecorino Romano, Grana Padano last months in the fridge.

Dried pasta from a pastificio

Must-See
Specialty food shops or directWhere/How
€3-8Budget

Artisan pasta from Gragnano (near Naples), Martelli (Tuscany), or Setaro. The texture and flavour difference from supermarket pasta is dramatic. Lasts years in your cupboard.

Olive oil (in a tin for safety)

Must-See
Producers or good shopsWhere/How
€8-25Budget

Buy in tins rather than glass for safe transport. Or wrap glass bottles in clothes in checked luggage. Check harvest date — within 12 months.

Dried porcini mushrooms

Must-See
Any good food shopWhere/How
€15-30/100gBudget

Lightweight, long-lasting, and transformative in risotto and pasta. Italian dried porcini are worth 5x the imported versions.

Coffee (beans or ground)

Must-See
Torrefazione or supermarketWhere/How
€5-12Budget

Illy, Lavazza, Kimbo, or better — from a local torrefazione (roaster). Whole beans stay fresh longer. Neapolitan brands (Kimbo, Passalacqua) for espresso lovers.

💡 Pro tip: Pack food items in checked luggage, wrapped in clothing. Declare food at customs if asked — cheese, oil, pasta, and coffee are all legal to import in reasonable quantities.

Bottom line

The best Italian souvenir is one that brings Italy into your daily life. A bottle of olive oil, a kilo of Parmigiano, or a bag of espresso beans will remind you of your trip every day.

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