Francine Segan

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Francine Segan, food historian and expert on Italian cuisine, is a James Beard nominated author of six cookbooks, including PASTA MODERN: New & Inspired Recipes from Italy and DOLCI: Italy’s Sweets.
She gives a popular series, UNDISCOVERED ITALY, at the prestigious Smithsonian Museum in Washington, DC and at NYC’s premiere cultural center the 92nd St Y. She is a frequent guest speaker at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University and numerous museums across the country such as the Virginia Fine Arts Museum and Lightner Museum.
She is a regular on the Food Network, PBS, Discovery and History Channels and writes for a number of publications including Saveur and Epicurius Magazines. She has been quoted as in hundreds of newspapers and magazines including the USA Today, The New York Times, Wall St Journal, Fine Cooking and Vogue magazines.
She is frequent food judge and has been on the judging panel for the Fancy Food Show, Baccardi Cocktail Competition, Barilla’s Pasta World Championship, Charcuterie Masters and the International Pesto Competition. She was honored by the mayor of Alba with the task of presenting NYC’s Mayor Bill De Blasio with 2014’s prized white truffle.

Recipes by Francine Segan

Little bundles of pasta filled with cheesy tomatoes, served with light tomato water and a touch of sweet and savory marinated lemons, a spectacular…
A classic soup of Bologna, which features soft tasty dough cubes, is traditionally served in capon broth during Christmas, but is a wonderful comfort…
The Etruscans settled in the west coast of central Italy in roughly the 8th Century BC.  Although there are many surviving stone tablets with…
I first spotted this lovely irregularly shaped stuffed pasta in Brisighella, a charming Medieval hilltown in the Romagna part of Emilia-Romagna,…
Campofilone is a specialty pasta of the town of Campofilone in the Marche region. Made since the 1400s and renowned around the world for its special…
In the past, meat was scarse in most Italian homes resulting in many meatless meatballs like Abruzzo’s cheese-egg balls. Polpette di Melanzane,…
Panzanella, Tuscan bread and tomato salad, is another dish like bean and veggie ribollita soup and pappa al pomodoro, tomato…
Pappa, which in Italian means pap is, as the name suggests, a soft mushy comfort food. Fighting food waste is a hot-button topic right now, but the…
Pane Arabo, in Italian literally “Arab bread,” usually refers to some sort of pita. However, in Tuscany, they’ve taken the concept of “pita” to an…
A perfect summer dessert, beautiful and takes just seconds to assemble using supermarket ingredients. Savoiardi---ladyfingers--layered with jam and…
Pinza* Bolognese, shortbread dough spread with a special jam and rolled, was a traditional Christmas dessert in Bologna, but is now available year-…
Outside of Italy “spumone” has come to mean molded ice cream in 3 layers—strawberry, vanilla and pistachio—for the colors of the Italian flag.…
Italians have a saying, all’amico pela il fico, e al nemico la pesca, “peel a fig for a friend and a peach for an enemy.”  It comes…
Watermelon custard, or Gelu di miluni in Sicilian dialect, is served all summer, but especially on July 15 in Palermo, in honor of…
You don’t need any special equipment to make this wonderful polenta-like pasta just your own fingers. Simply spread flour onto a work surface,…
In Italy practically everyone knows Disney’s “Grandma Duck,” Donald Duck’s grandmother. In Italy Grandma Duck aka Nonna Papera became the…
Ciaramicola, a lemon spice cake, covered with meringue and topped with sprinkles, is a classic Easter cake from the Perugia province of Umbria. It is…

User Activity

Francine Segan posted a question: I'd like to RENT a house in Tuscany_title