'Nduja di Spilinga 2026: The World's Most Copied Spreadable Salami Is Made in a Village of 1,400 People in Calabria — 70% Pork Fat, 30% Calabrian Chili, and Nothing Else
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
'Nduja (the specific Calabrian spreadable pork salami — the specific pronunciation (en-DOO-ya — the Calabrian dialect term whose specific etymology (the most debated single Italian food etymology: the specific derivation from the French "andouille" (the smoked pork intestine sausage from Lyon and Brittany) via the specific historical French culinary influence on the Kingdom of Naples in the Napoleonic period (1806-1815, the period when the Kingdom of Naples under the French-installed Murat dynasty is the most plausible single vector for the French andouille-to-Calabrian-nduja culinary transfer) is the most linguistically coherent single explanation for the specific Italian-French food terminology connection) produces the specific English-language pronunciation challenge that makes 'nduja one of the three Italian food names (alongside bruschetta and gnocchi) that the English speaker most consistently mispronounces): the Calabrian chili-pork spreadable salami that the global food market discovered approximately 2010-2015 and that the Spilinga (the specific comune of 1,400 inhabitants in the Vibo Valentia province, Calabria, 60km southwest of Catanzaro on the Tyrrhenian slope of the Calabrian Apennines) has been producing for at least 300 years.
The specific 'nduja composition: the authentic Spilinga 'nduja (the 'nduja de Spilinga (the Calabrian dialect designation that distinguishes the Spilinga product from the generic Calabrian 'nduja)) is composed exclusively of: pork fat (the specific soft fat cuts — the lard (the strutto), the belly fat (the pancetta fatty section), and the specific Calabrian black pig (the maiale nero calabrese — the specific Calabrian domestic pig breed (the local Calabrian pig descended from the Iberian black pig (the Suidae Sus scrofa domestica var. calabrese)) whose specific intramuscular fat distribution produces the correct 'nduja texture) approximately 60-70% by weight); Calabrian peperoncino (the red chili pepper — specifically the specific Calabrian chili varieties (the Peperoncino di Calabria (the generic Calabrian chili (the Capsicum annuum var. calabrese)) and the specific Diavolicchio (the "little devil" (the specific small, intensely hot Calabrian chili variety)) approximately 25-30% by weight); and sea salt (the specific minimal addition — less than 3% by weight).
'Nduja: How to Eat It, Where to Buy Authentic 'Nduja, and the Spilinga Festival
How to Eat 'Nduja
The specific 'nduja culinary applications: the primary use (the traditional Calabrian approach — the tartina (the thick slice of crusty bread toasted on the wood grill (the brace) and spread with the 'nduja directly from the casing, the fat melting on the hot bread surface and the chili releasing the specific aromatic compounds in the heat)): the most specifically 'nduja-forward single application and the one that the Spilinga production family uses as the specific standard for assessing the quality of their product. The secondary uses: the 'nduja pasta sauce (the specific Italian-restaurant adoption of the 'nduja (the 2010s global restaurant spread (the 'nduja pizza, the 'nduja pasta, and the 'nduja burrata in Italian-inspired restaurants from London to New York to Tokyo) has used the 'nduja as the specific strong-flavour heat element in the pasta sauce (the 'nduja dissolved in the specific white wine and olive oil base with the crushed tomato creates the most intensely flavoured of the simple Italian pasta sauces at the minimum preparation complexity)); the 'nduja with eggs (the uova all'nduja — the specific Calabrian breakfast (the 'nduja stirred into the scrambled eggs (the uova strapazzate) at the moment of service, the fat and the chili of the 'nduja infusing the egg proteins for the specific Calabrian breakfast experience that the Agriturismo di Spilinga and the Vibo Valentia coast farmstays serve as the most locally specific morning meal)).
Where to Buy and the Spilinga Festival
The authentic 'nduja di Spilinga purchase: the Spilinga production families (the specific Spilinga 'nduja producers whose products are available at the Spilinga local market and at their own farmgate sales (the vendita diretta — the Spilinga production families include the Spilinga Alimentari (the specific family production that the Slow Food Presidio Nduja di Spilinga identifies as the benchmark quality producer)): the specific Spilinga 'nduja casing formats (the 'nduja is produced in the budello (the natural gut casing) in three specific sizes: the grossa (the large casing, 0.5-1kg, for the aged product); the mezzana (the medium casing, 200-500g); and the piccola (the small casing, 100-200g for the fresh 'nduja)): the Sagra della 'Nduja di Spilinga (the annual 'nduja festival — held the first Saturday of August in the Piazza di Spilinga: the most specifically Calabrian of the southern Italian food festivals, attended primarily by the Calabrian community rather than the international tourist, with the specific 'nduja cooking demonstrations, the 'nduja tasting (the 'nduja on bread at the specific festival stalls at the nominal charge of €0.50-1.00 per portion), and the specific 'nduja production competition (the specific Calabrian production families competing for the annual 'Nduja d'Oro (the Golden 'Nduja prize) whose judging criteria (the specific colour (the deep terracotta-red of the authentic 'nduja), the consistency (the room-temperature spreadability without being liquid), and the heat level (the specific Calabrian peperoncino heat that should be present but not overwhelming)) are the most precisely calibrated single Italian food-competition judging criteria).
Q&A: 'Nduja di Spilinga
What is the difference between Spilinga 'nduja and supermarket 'nduja?
The specific quality comparison: the authentic Spilinga 'nduja (the budello-cased product from the specific Spilinga production families) versus the supermarket 'nduja (the industrially produced spreadable product): the primary differences are: the fat quality (the authentic uses the Calabrian black pig fat with the specific intramuscular fat composition; the industrial uses the factory-farmed pig fat with the higher water content and the lower aromatic complexity); the chili quality (the authentic uses the specific Calabrian peperoncino varieties dried and ground traditionally; the industrial uses the capsicum oleoresin (the industrial chili extract) for consistent heat calibration without the specific Calabrian chili aromatic complexity); and the aging (the authentic Spilinga 'nduja is aged minimum 30-60 days in the budello at the specific Calabrian cellar temperature (12-15°C); the industrial product is typically distributed within 7-14 days of production with the specific chemical preservation (the sodium nitrite and the potassium nitrate) that replaces the specific salt-and-aging preservation of the authentic product). The price difference (the authentic Spilinga 'nduja: approximately €15-25/kg at the Spilinga farmgate or the Calabrian specialty shop; the supermarket 'nduja: approximately €8-12/kg at the national distribution point).