I finally opened the Panettone by Roy. This is a delicious baked good. Moist texture, addictive flavours. This panettone was filled with chocolate chips rather than candied fruit, orange zest and raisins. It didn’t have that floral fragrance that some Italian panettones have. It’s tasty, but it doesn’t taste like panettone to me.
I don’t know if I would spend the money on one again (over $100 vs $40-$50 for a good Italian import), but I would enjoy a slice again.
The air pockets are bigger than a Loison or Vergani panettone.
BarneyGrubble
(Beethoven and Latina singer fan in Ottawa)
15
I’ve bought lots of panettone over the years, wanting to like them, but don’t like the dry, bready texture of them; what I keep looking for is a cakey texture. The only one that came close to what I’m looking for was one that had cream in it. Subsequent ones with cream were not as good.
That said, I think they would be good as a base for bread pudding.
This Panettone from Roy was a $140 panettone. Very moist, like a lighter, flakier and moister-than-typical brioche, but I’d say it’s still closer to an enriched yeast bread than a cake.
Pandoro has more of a cake texture, to me.
I have used supermarket panettone in bread pudding. My friend uses it for French toast.
The $40 Loison panettones aren’t dry like the $15 supermarket panettones.
BarneyGrubble
(Beethoven and Latina singer fan in Ottawa)
17
Thanks for this info; I’ve never had pandoro before. My favorite Italian deli should have both at reduced prices now, so I will try it now.
I thought I took photos of my Roy panettone this year but apparently I didn’t. I got the classic orange one again (same as last year) but we wound up not opening it on Xmas morning because my brother made homemade cinn rolls instead. So I opened it a few days later, and we ate most of it fresh, then made french toast with the last bit. Delicious.
Panettone is like fruitcake . . . many varieties . . . many people who never ate any of them but just hate it . . .
good stuff is good stuff.
lousy stuff is lousy no matter what the box says . . .
Aug/Sep I make a pre-WW2 recipe fruitcake(s). mega-fruits/nuts/etc. it usually last until March - but this year we had multiple cousins as house guests - who ate prodigious quantities of Granny’s Christmas Cookies and the fruit cake . . . my grandmother always sent everyone home with a 3 gal metal tin of cookies . . . she was much loved by her grandchildren - and as demonstrated this year, , , she is now gone, but they still love her cookie recipes.
I just saw (yes, in February) some Roy panettones at my local independent markets, both chocolate and cherry-pistachio, presumably well past their prime but stil $59.99 (I’m in the Bay Area).
We really enjoyed this peach, chocolate and amaretto Colomba made by Galup, a bakery that has been around since 1922. I will try Galup panettone next Christmas.