Best Before Date: 02/07/2027 | Lot: 07022027
The fusilli from Pastificio Artigianale Minardo in Ragusa, Sicily, are produced using the traditional method "trafilata al bronzo" (bronze drawn) and with a high proportion of handwork from durum wheat semolina, which is 100% organic, ancient Sicilian grain of the Russello variety.
The flour from the Russello grain is very digestible and the gluten is very easy to digest.Cooking time: ♨︎6 minutes
Weight: ⚖︎ 500 gr.
Packaging: ⚒︎ CellophaneThe story of fusilli begins in rural southern Italy, where pasta wasn't mass-produced but lovingly handcrafted. The name fusilli comes from the Italian word "fuso"—the spindle once used for spinning wool. With this very tool, women in the villages of Campania, Calabria, and Sicily wrapped fine strands of dough around the spindle to give them their characteristic spiral shape.
This technique was passed down within families, often across generations – a blend of everyday life and ritual, of necessity and culinary devotion. The resulting shape was not only decorative but also functional: the spiral held sauces, spices, and flavors better than smooth pasta – and quickly made fusilli a popular staple food in the simpler cuisines of the South.
In Sicily, for example, fusilli were traditionally served with tomato sauces, wild fennel, anchovies, and raisins – a reflection of the diverse cultural influences that shape the island. While fusilli are now industrially produced, the old method of " trafilata al bronzo" (bronze-drawn pasta) remains closest to artisanal production: it gives the pasta a rough, slightly porous surface to which even simple sauces adhere perfectly.
Product name
Pasta made from organic durum wheat semolina and spring water from Italy, produced according to the traditional "al Bronzo" method.
Pastificio Artigianale Minardo Fusilli al Bronzo Varietà Russello Bio
Russello* durum wheat semolina, spring water.
*From organic farming
Organic and vegan.
No preservatives and no added sugar.
Contains gluten.
Net content
Pack of 500 gOrigin of durum wheat semolina
Italy
















