Recipes & Lore • Bakery Counter Canon
Zeppole, for St. Joseph's Day
For a few weeks around March 19, every Italian bakery in Rhode Island converts to a zeppole factory. The Rhode Island zeppola (that's the singular) is a baked ring of choux pastry — éclair dough — split and loaded with rum- or vanilla-scented pastry cream, crowned with more cream, powdered sugar, and a maraschino cherry. It is seasonal, it is non-negotiable, and it is bought by the tray. Come April, they vanish until next year — which is half the point.
You need
- 1 cup water, 1 stick butter, ¼ tsp salt, 1 tsp sugar
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 4 large eggs
- For the cream: 2 cups whole milk, ½ cup sugar, ¼ cup cornstarch, 4 egg yolks
- 1 tsp vanilla — plus 1 tbsp dark rum, if you're doing it right
- Powdered sugar and maraschino cherries, to finish
Method
- Pastry cream first: whisk sugar, cornstarch, and yolks; bring the milk to a simmer; temper it into the yolks and cook, whisking, until thick. Vanilla and rum in, plastic pressed to the surface, into the fridge.
- Choux: boil the water, butter, salt, and sugar. Dump in the flour all at once and stir over the heat until the dough balls up and films the pan bottom.
- Off the heat, beat in the eggs one at a time until glossy and just pipeable.
- Pipe 3-inch rings through a large star tip onto parchment. Bake at 400°F for 30–35 minutes until deep golden. Do not open the oven early — a peeked-at zeppola is a flat zeppola.
- Cool completely, split, fill generously, crown with more cream, dust with powdered sugar, and seat the cherry. Serve the day they're made.
The lore: St. Joseph's feast has been fixed on March 19 since
Rome made it official in 1479, and in Sicily the saint is
credited with ending a medieval famine — which is why his day is celebrated
with food. The zeppola's modern form is Neapolitan: in the 19th century a
baker named Pasquale Pintauro famously sold them from his
Naples doorway every March 19. The tradition crossed with the great Italian
immigration, and it landed hardest here — Rhode Island is the
most Italian state in America by ancestry, nearly one in
five residents — so every March the bakery counters from Federal Hill to
Cranston disappear under pyramids of white boxes. Families are loyal to one
bakery's zeppola and consider all others counterfeit. The fried Sicilian
cousin, the sfincia, has its partisans too; the argument is part of
the recipe.
Sources & further reading
- Quahog.org — Zeppole and Saint Joseph's Day
- New England Historical Society — It's St. Joseph's Day, Eat Your Zeppole
- Saveur — Sfinci and Zeppole Are the Deep-Fried Stars of St. Joseph's Day
Send the taste of the Hill
Pastry cream doesn't ship — but the shelf-stable Rhode Island canon does, packed in the Rhode Island Survival Kit, field guide included.
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