Torrone Sardo (Sardinian Nougat) Recipe on Food52 (2024)

5 Ingredients or Fewer

by: Emiko

November29,2013

5

2 Ratings

  • Serves 10

Jump to Recipe

Author Notes

There are two main ways to make this traditional Sardinian torrone. The first is to place the honey and unbeaten (or lightly beaten) egg whites in a pan then gently heat while stirring continuously with a wooden spoon for 45 minutes. Nuts are then added and mixed for a further 30 minutes. The second way – the way I've done it – is to whisk the whites to peaks and add it to honey melted in a bainmarie before carrying on with the same procedure and stirring, adding nuts, stirring.

It's a simple, even relaxing recipe. No watching of thermometers, no scalding syrup or defining moments. Just a gentle heat and slow, continuous stirring. Put on some good music, or better yet, have some good company in the kitchen with you so you can share the stirring and you're halfway there.

The most traditional recipe uses just almonds and Sardinian honey, which is gathered from the Mediterranean scrub that surrounds the island. Try a small portion of pistachio, pine nuts or hazelnuts too. Try dried figs or other dried fruit in it too, just be mindful of the proportions. You can peel your almonds, but I like the contrast of the skins on, either way, an even toasting in the oven is a must to bring out the flavour. If you wanted to add some further aromatics to the batch, try some grated fresh orange or lemon peel or a freshly scraped vanilla bean pod. Typically, it's set between two special wafers known as ostia in Italian. If you can't get these easily, line your pan with parchment as described below. The result is a soft, chewy nougat - a torrone morbido. —Emiko

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • 1/2 poundnuts, such as whole almonds
  • 1/2 poundhoney
  • 2 egg whites
Directions
  1. Prepare a small square or rectangular baking dish with a layer of ostia (traditional wafer) cut to size or two layers of parchment cut to size, one long piece covering the dish vertically, another long piece covering it horizontally, so that the sides of the dish will be covered and you can fold the parchment over the top of the torrone while it is setting.
  2. For the nuts, it's traditional to use 100% whole peeled almonds, but you can leave them unpeeled or do a mix, substituting a portion of almonds for other nuts or even dried fruit such as figs. Place the nuts on a single layer in a baking tray and toast in oven at 325º F, about 10-15 minutes or until shiny and fragrant. Set aside.
  3. Place honey in a large bowl over a saucepan of water (bain marie) on the lowest heat. Make sure the bowl is not touching the water. Heat honey until it melts, stirring occasionally with a wooden spoon.
  4. In the meantime, whisk egg whites to stiff peaks in a separate bowl. Add the whites to the bowl of honey, stirring with the wooden spoon to incorporate. It should turn into a caramel-coloured cream. Keep cooking, stirring slowly but continuously over gentle heat for 45 minutes. The mixture should thicken and become pale. A small test should determine that your torrone is at a good stage – a drop of the mixture in a glass of water should solidify into a soft ball, not dissolve immediately.
  5. Add the nuts to the mixture and continue cooking and stirring for 30 minutes. Pour into your prepared baking tin. Fold over the parchment to cover the top and smooth it down, pressing the torrone gently with your hands. If using the more traditional ostia, place another layer of ostia cut to size on top and press gently but firmly. Place in a cool place to set for a couple of hours.
  6. When set, cut the torrone into thick slices with a sharp, heavy knife (a little olive oil wiped onto the knife helps). Wrap in parchment or cellophane and tie with pretty string or ribbon for the perfect homemade holiday gift. Keeps very well wrapped in parchment or cellophane and stored somewhere cool.

Tags:

  • Candy
  • Italian
  • Honey
  • Egg
  • Make Ahead
  • Slow Cooker
  • 5 Ingredients or Fewer
  • Christmas
  • Gluten-Free
  • Dessert

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Christina Kurtz

  • Fredrik Backman

  • Kristina Nikolova

  • Betty McPettypants

  • Linda Michaluk

Popular on Food52

107 Reviews

MC September 27, 2021

Done it twice and it turned out very good. Just to be clear, do you cook in bain marie for the whole time? even when adding the egg whites plus nuts? Thank you, MC

LittleBlackPot July 20, 2020

Spent 4 hours total: made pizzelles to line the pan as I saw a ostie maker and thought they'd be similar. Don't know if that is so; the pizzelles worked out. I let the candy cook extra at both stages considering honey (I used local huajillo honey) is hygroscopic and wanted it to set on my first attempt. After pouring into the pizzelle-lined pan, I topped it with edible rice paper. Cut easily, tastes excellent! This is a great recipe!

B03 March 5, 2020

How long does this recipe take overall?
I'm thinking of making it for a Food Tech Assessment Task.
I only have 2 hours to make, but should be ok for setting time not to be included in this.

B03 March 5, 2020

Or what about Macadamia Honey?

Jeremy W. August 3, 2020

Yupp. You will destroy the living bacteria but it will work fine!

Emma April 14, 2018

Id like to make this for my dads birthdy ina couple of days but i have to ask what is the point of whisking the egg whites before adding to the honey if all the air will be stirred out when cooking? Does it make a difference to the end product?

Emiko April 15, 2018

Absolutely! That opaque white colour and soft, fluffy, chewy texture is all due to the egg whites being whipped -- the whipping changes the structure of the proteins similar to how heating changes the structure of the proteins -- you can't go back. I have never made it without whipping the whites to confidently give you a side by side comparison of what will happen but I'm pretty sure it'll be a giant, inedible flop if you don't whip them!

Emma April 15, 2018

Thanks so much for that! Im going to make it tomorrow and am so grateful that youve lrovided a recipe where i dont have to panic over temperatures and add in glucose etc xx

Janice S. October 31, 2020

Can I use a layer sugar sheets on the top and bottom so it doesn’t stick ?

Janice S. October 31, 2020

A layer cake of sugar sheets Or rice paper ?

deliane February 22, 2018

(sorry- typo: terrOne, of course. spellcheck! always thinks it knows best (-: )

deliane February 22, 2018

thank you very much for posting this! I have been searching and searching for the exquisite terrine I had in Italy.. but all the ones I've found in stores in New York have the glucose syrup, corn starch, etc etc.. I am looking forward to trying this-- so simple- and so 'Old World slow'.. sigh! with just 3 ingredients, all that matters is quality and taking the time to do something right. how lovely.

etm567 February 2, 2018

Excuse me for being an old lady grammar policewoman, but you don't mean to substitute almonds for other nuts, you mean to substitute some other nuts for some of the almonds. The substitute is the different thing you add. For some reason, the younger generation often gets this backwards. Like a substitute teacher is substituting for the regular teacher. You can substitute some pistachios for some of the almonds. Not the other way around.

Anthony B. January 8, 2019

Lol.
There goes the neighbourhood for the older folks.

Ashley A. November 10, 2016

Hmm at a loss, after mixing the whites and honey there is only a layer of light colored foam at the top with a layer of honey at the bottom. Should I cook longer than the suggested 45 min? Thanks !

Ashley A. November 10, 2016

Oh and I stirred slowly the whole time!

Christina K. October 24, 2016

First of all thank you thank you thank you for this recipe! My father was born in Patada in Sardegna and I remember as a child buying to toronne like this on the streets of the town during festival. Every time my dad went to Italy we all waited for him to bring some back. My father is been gone for six years now and it has brought so much joy to my family being able to have this wonderful treat again. I have had some issue with batches not setting, in reading some of the comments here I see that it is just a case of cooking it longer. I have a question for you though. have you ever tried making larger batches? If so did you have issues with that? I tried and it didn't set after an hour and a half to two hours of stirring. I just don't know if it just takes longer or if it just doesn't work in larger batches. Can you please advise?

Fredrik B. December 19, 2015

It doesn't really seem to be setting. I did try the water control, which seemed like a success, but it's still incredibly soft and sticky after 24 hours.

Emiko December 19, 2015

Sounds like it needs to be cooked a little longer (even though the test should confirm it's right). You can try putting it back on the heat (a reader below did this and had success!) for a bit longer. It shouldn't be as sticky as this sounds once it's set.

Fredrik B. December 20, 2015

Tried melting it down and heating it for another half hour. Which was probably a complete overkill, since it reduced quite a bit, but this time it set nearly seconds after I was done.

fiorentina C. December 25, 2014

I had one problem when the torrone the honey and the egg white were always very foaming and the honey and eggs were never thicking ,I donot know were I whened wrong,could you explain it to me.

karamou December 26, 2014

I made the recipe several times over the last few days and over different hobs. I realised that some needed more heat than what it says on the recipe. If you heat it more it should thicken without problems.

Kristina N. December 22, 2014

Does anyone have any idea what you can substitute the edible paper for? Would parchment paper do?

Emiko December 22, 2014

Yep! As you'll see in the photos and recipe above, I used parchment paper - Instruction no 1 tells you how to use it! :)

Kristina N. December 22, 2014

Oops! Thank you! Can't wait to give it a try!

Betty M. December 20, 2014

This came out so nicely! I used Turkish honey which gave it a beautiful caramel color. Almonds and dried cranberries with a dash of almond extract and some lemon zest.

Linda M. December 19, 2014

just tried my first slice...pretty good...not like the picture but as I substituted a mix of dried sour cherries and pistachios (did by weight with total at 8 oz), that's to be expected. Used a silicon loaf pan lined with the edible paper. I have another recipe that I like so may have to give it a try to compare side by side...

karamou December 18, 2014

Just made the recipe: great smell, exact timing and proportions, just perfect! Can't wait to try it and share it as christmas present! Thanks a lot for the recipe

cookdoctor December 18, 2014

Definitely going to try it!

Linda M. December 18, 2014

given the 6x6 seems large from the comment below, can you provide any info on the preferred size of pan? A bread loaf pan perhaps?

Emiko December 21, 2014

I used a 7x8 inch pan actually (you can see it in the photos)! I think something may have gone amiss below.

Liz December 17, 2014

The cooking for 30 more minutes after adding the nuts feels a bit long to me. 15 minutes in all airiness was gone and it became very thick. Could barely fill the bottom of my 6x6 pan with a thin layer. What should it look like when it comes off the heat?

Emiko December 21, 2014

Hi Liz, 30 minutes is just about right timing but sometimes you may need more and to find that out you should do the soft ball test which is described above. It sounds like something went drastically wrong here! The nougat in the photos above were made in a 7x8 inch pan so there should definitely have been enough to make a layer more than an inch thick. When it comes off the heat it should be very thick and glossy and look like the image above where you can see it in the aforementioned pan. Hope that helps!

Susan M. December 7, 2014

This was easy and turned our perfectly when recipe followed as described. the comments and questions blow my mind. Pop.

Paige October 28, 2014

Hi, I was just wondering if this was soft or hard nougat?

Emiko October 28, 2014

Hi! It's described in the Author notes above - this makes a soft, chewy nougat (torrone morbido).

Torrone Sardo (Sardinian Nougat) Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

What's the difference between nougat and torrone? ›

Italy's version of nougat is called the torrone. Torrone is a form of white nougat that is very similar to soft nougat in many ways yet there are some differences. One difference between French nougat and torrone is that torrone is finished off with white icing on top after it has been made.

Can you eat the paper on torrone? ›

It's made up of four things. White chocolate, marshmallow, almonds and rice paper (yes, you can eat the rice paper).

Is torrone hard or soft? ›

A soft nougat made of sugar, honey, egg whites, and toasted almonds or hazelnuts, torrone is a typical sweet enjoyed in Italy around the holidays. Its texture can vary from duro – crunchy and hard – to morbido – soft and chewy.

How do you eat torrone candy? ›

Torrone is often served as a dessert after dinner, paired with a hot beverage, or with a glass of Digestivo liqueur, most often with herbal flavor, like Amaro or Sambuca.

What is the English name for torrone? ›

Translation of torrone – Italian–English dictionary

nougat [noun] a sticky kind of sweet containing nuts etc.

Is nougat very unhealthy? ›

Nougat candy is sweet, so it isn't generally considered a healthy food. Artisan nougat, however, is made with fine ingredients that are better for you than cheaper sweeteners and flavourings.

Does torrone need to be refrigerated? ›

The torrone can be stored at room temperature or refrigerated in an airtight container for up to 2 weeks, using parchment to line the container and separate layers.

Does torrone go bad? ›

If we keep the turrón in a cool, dry and odour-free place, it can be kept in good condition for up to 1 year. It should be remembered that turrón is mainly toasted almonds, honey and sugar.

How long can you store torrone? ›

Store on the countertop in an airtight container for up to 2 weeks. The nougat will absorb moisture from the air, so be sure it's kept airtight and in a cool, dry place.

How do you eat Italian torrone? ›

Torrone is often served with an after-dinner amaro (bitters), a sambuca (a sweet anise-tasting digestivo), or a liquor, such as Strega.

What part of Italy is torrone from? ›

Abruzzo. Abruzzo is home to torrone di Guardiagrele, a crunchy nougat made with whole toasted almonds mixed with sugar, cinnamon, and candied fruit. Gennaro Nurzia created a tender chocolate and hazelnut torrone in 1835, which today is produced in the towns Aquila and Sulmona.

What region of Italy is torrone from? ›

The city of Cremona in Lombardy has long proclaimed itself as the home of classical torrone. It maintains that the sweet was served there for the first time at the lavish banquet after the marriage of the Tuscan-born mercenary Francesco Sforza to Bianca Maria Visconti on October 2, 1441.

What is a fun fact about torrone? ›

The most romantic story is that it was invented in Cremona, in northern Lombardy, in the 15th century to commemorate the marriage of the Duke of Milan's daughter. Cooks molded the sweet in the shape of the city's famous towers, called torrione, and the rest was history.

What's the difference between nougat and taffy? ›

Although not closely “genetically” related to nougat or torrón, taffy recipes have a lot in common with the chewy versions of those sweets. The big difference: taffy is not (normally) aerated and set with egg whites, and doesn't (normally) have additions like nuts or dried fruit.

Should I refrigerate nougat? ›

During an especially hot summer in the south of France, I have been known to store my nougat in an airtight container in the bottom drawer of my fridge to stop it from melting (best to avoid humidity though, so only in extreme circ*mstances).

What are the three types of nougat? ›

There are three main types of nougat: white, brown, and viennese. White nougat, the most common variety, is likely what you're familiar with.

Is nougat the same as taffy? ›

Although not closely “genetically” related to nougat or torrón, taffy recipes have a lot in common with the chewy versions of those sweets. The big difference: taffy is not (normally) aerated and set with egg whites, and doesn't (normally) have additions like nuts or dried fruit.

Is nougat just marshmallow? ›

Nougat is a confection made with sugar or honey that's cooked and then whipped with egg whites to aerate it. It often contains almonds or other nuts, candied fruits and chocolate, although it can be left plain. Nougat can be soft and tender like marshmallow but is more often dense and very chewy.

What's the difference between torrone and turrón? ›

One of the differences between turrón and italian torrone is the proportion of nuts they contain: Spanish turrón has a minimum of 60% almonds, a higher percentage than Italian torrone. However, turrón and torrone probably have a similar origin, and there's little doubt it is Moorish.

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