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Bicerin


Bicerin


Bicerin (Piedmontese: [bitʃəˈɾiŋ]) is a traditional hot drink native to Turin, Italy, made of espresso, drinking chocolate, and milk served layered in a small glass.

Origin

The word bicerin (Piedmontese for 'small glass') is the equivalent of Italian bicchierino (diminutive of bicchiere, lit.'glass').

This coffee beverage has existed since the 18th century and was praised by Alexandre Dumas in 1852. It is believed to be based on the 17th century drink bavarèisa ("Bavarian"): the key distinction is that in a bicerin the three components are carefully layered in the glass rather than being mixed together.

Caffè al Bicerin, which sits across from the Santuario della Consolata in Turin's piazza della Consolata, has been serving the drink since the 18th century. Local lore suggests that bicerin was invented at Caffė al Bicerin or at Caffė Fiorio around 1704.

Liqueur

The Vincenzi Family Distillery in Turin also produces a chocolate hazelnut liqueur under this name.

See also

  • Piedmontese cuisine
  • List of coffee drinks
  • List of chocolate drinks
  • Espressino and marocchino – similar drinks

References

External links

  • Bicerin at prodottitipici.it (in Italian)
  • Bicerin in the New York Times
  • Caffè al Bicerin


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Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Bicerin by Wikipedia (Historical)



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