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Mora di Rovo

Blackberry

Appears in
Carluccio's Complete Italian Food

By Antonio Carluccio and Priscilla Carluccio

Published 1997

  • About
In summer, it is common to see Italians making their way through thorny brambles to collect wild blackberries. Agricultural progress means that it is now possible to buy cultivated blackberries, grown on thornless bushes for easy picking. Although it is less flavoursome than the wild variety, the cultivated blackberry is still good in fruit salads and as a topping for fruit tarts, as well as making delicious jams, compotes, juices and syrups for use in the liqueur, pâtisserie and confectionery industries. It is a very perishable soft fruit and should be eaten as soon as it is picked.

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