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The Sfoglia Canon: Where Bologna Still Rolls by Hand
Food

The Sfoglia Canon: Where Bologna Still Rolls by Hand

By Mes Prestiges Editorial Team Last reviewed June 2026
6 min read
Food

Forget the carbonara-and-spritz canteens off Piazza Maggiore. The real Bologna lives wherever a sfoglina is still bent over a wooden board at eight in the morning, rolling egg dough thin enough to read a newspaper through.

There is a sentence Bolognesi say to one another, half-joke and half-creed: the city is not red because of its rooftops or its politics, it is red because of ragù. To understand Emilia-Romagna at all you have to start here, on a marble or wooden board, with a woman they call a sfoglina rolling sfoglia — sheet pasta — by hand with a metre-long rolling pin until it is translucent. Everything else in this chapter, the balsamico estates, the Adriatic fritto, the three-star theatre in Modena, radiates outward from that gesture. Get the sfoglia right and you have the region; get it from a machine and you have a postcard.

The hill to die on is in Bolognina, the working-class quarter across the railway tracks where tourists rarely wander. Trattoria di Via Serra is the platonic ideal of the modern Bologna trattoria: two friends who refused to cut a single corner, a hand-lettered menu, tagliatelle al ragù whose sauce has been coaxed for hours and whose noodles are cut wide and irregular the way a knife cuts them, not a die. They take the Slow Food gospel seriously without ever being precious about it. Book days ahead; the room is small and the city knows.

Across town in Porto-Saragozza, Trattoria da Me carries the same torch with a slightly more contemporary hand — it is the descendant of an old family osteria, run now by a sfoglina who trained in the canon and then nudged it forward. Order the tortellini, and notice that they are small, almost fussily small, because size here is a moral question: a tortellino should be a thimble, not a dumpling. For the institution-grade version of the same faith, All'Osteria Bottega near the Saragozza gate is where Bolognesi send their visiting in-laws when they want to win an argument about who does it best — mortadella whipped to a mousse, tortellini in a real capon brodo, a wine list that rewards lingering.

If you want to watch the dough happen rather than just eat its result, go to Sfoglia Rina in the Santo Stefano quarter. It began as a sfoglia laboratory — a shop that supplied the city's tables — and grew a dining room around the work, so you eat with the rolling boards in your eyeline. It is the most legible introduction to the whole craft: tortelloni, gramigna, tagliatelle, all visibly born twenty feet from your fork. Casual, quick, honest, and a useful antidote to the idea that this food requires a shrine.

Two more belong in any serious account. Trattoria Meloncello sits at the foot of the portico that climbs to San Luca — the longest covered walkway in the world — and has fed pilgrims and Sunday families for generations; its tagliatelle and its tortellini in brodo are benchmarks precisely because nothing about the place has been updated for fashion. And Drogheria della Rosa, in a former pharmacy whose apothecary shelves and bottles still line the walls, is where the ragù canon meets a little theatre: the owner recites the day's dishes tableside like a man reading poetry he wrote himself. It is warmer and more eccentric than the trattoria template, and all the better for it.

A word on triangulation, because the canon has impostors. The reliable tell is the tagliatella itself — width, irregularity, the faint tooth of properly rolled egg dough — and the brodo, which should taste of long-simmered capon and nothing from a cube. The University-quarter stalwart Trattoria Anna Maria, run for decades by its namesake, is a good final exam: a noisy, convivial room where the pasta arrives in portions sized for hungry students and the sfoglia is unmistakably hand-cut. If you eat at three of these in three days, your palate will calibrate itself, and the Piazza Maggiore canteens will never fool you again.

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