Pappardelle al Cinghiale (Wild Boar Pasta)
Pappardelle al Cinghiale

Description
Florence (Firenze), as the capital of Tuscany, is the epicenter of traditional wild boar cuisine. Here, Pappardelle al Cinghiale represents the pinnacle of rustic Tuscan pasta dishes, showcasing the region's game hunting heritage and pasta-making artistry. While available throughout the city, the most authentic versions are typically found in traditional trattorie away from the main tourist areas.
Dietary Information
Serving information
Serving style
Served as a 'primo piatto' (first course) in a wide, shallow bowl to showcase the pasta. Typically garnished with a light grating of aged Pecorino Toscano cheese, never Parmigiano in traditional Florentine establishments.
Quick facts
Traditional Florentine restaurants serve lunch 12:30 PM - 3 PM and dinner 7:30 PM - 11 PM. Many close on Sunday evenings and/or Mondays.
Safety Tips
What to Look For
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Properly slow-cooked, tender meat
Wild boar must be thoroughly cooked to be safe. The meat should be tender enough to pull apart easily with a fork, indicating proper cooking time (minimum 2-3 hours of simmering).
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Fresh, house-made pasta
Fresh pasta should have a slightly irregular appearance and rough texture. This indicates it's made in-house rather than from pre-packaged sources, ensuring better quality control.
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Clear description of sourcing
Restaurants that specify their wild boar is sourced from regulated hunting or farms ('cinghiale toscano,' 'cacciagione locale') follow proper food safety protocols.
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Rich aroma with wine and herbs
A proper wild boar ragu should have a complex aroma with notes of wine, herbs (rosemary, juniper, bay leaf), and a mild gamey scent. This indicates proper marinating and cooking techniques.
What to avoid
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Extremely gamey or 'off' smell
While wild boar naturally has a slightly gamey aroma, an overwhelming or unpleasant smell may indicate improper handling or aging of the meat.
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Uniform, cube-like meat pieces
Suspiciously uniform pieces may indicate pre-packaged or processed meat rather than properly prepared wild boar. Authentic ragu has irregular, shredded pieces.
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Excessively greasy sauce
While the sauce should be rich, excessive oil floating on top suggests poor preparation or an attempt to mask low-quality ingredients.
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Suspiciously low prices in tourist areas
Quality wild boar and handmade pasta require proper ingredients and preparation time. Extremely cheap versions in tourist areas often use inferior ingredients or pre-made components.
Price information
Price range
Budget tips
- Restaurants in the Oltrarno district often offer better value than those near the Duomo or Uffizi.
- The 'menu del giorno' (menu of the day) can include pappardelle dishes at better prices.
- Lunch prices average 15-18 EUR versus 18-25 EUR at dinner for the same dish.
- Small, family-run trattorie often provide better value than upscale ristoranti.
Value indicators
- Hand-cut, irregularly shaped pappardelle indicating truly handmade pasta.
- Depth of flavor in the sauce suggesting proper marination and slow cooking.
- Generous but appropriate portion size (not excessive to justify high prices).
- Tender wild boar meat that breaks apart easily with a fork.
Where to Find This Dish
Oltrarno
The less touristy southern bank of the Arno river, especially Santo Spirito and San Frediano neighborhoods, home to authentic, family-run trattorie.
Piazza Santo Spirito, Piazza del Carmine, Via Maggio
Dinner (7:30 PM - 10 PM), Weekend Lunch (1 PM - 3 PM)
San Niccolò
A somewhat hidden neighborhood with excellent local restaurants serving traditional Tuscan cuisine.
Piazza San Niccolò, Via San Niccolò
Dinner (8 PM - 10 PM)
Sant'Ambrogio
An authentic neighborhood with an excellent market and surrounding traditional restaurants.
Mercato di Sant'Ambrogio, Piazza dei Ciompi
Lunch (12:30 PM - 2:30 PM), Dinner (7:30 PM - 10 PM)
Countryside Restaurants
Restaurants in the hills surrounding Florence often serve the most authentic versions, using truly local wild boar.
Fiesole, Settignano, Impruneta
Weekend Lunch (1 PM - 3 PM)
Vendor Tips
- Ask if they make their pasta in-house ('La pasta è fatta in casa?').
- Inquire about the source of their wild boar ('Da dove viene il cinghiale?').
- Check if they follow traditional marination with wine and juniper ('Marinate il cinghiale nel vino?').
- In Florence, a good sign is a restaurant that's been operating for generations ('storico' or 'dal [year]' in their name).
How to Order
Regional Variations
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Pappardelle al Cinghiale del Chianti
(Pappardelle al Cinghiale del Chianti)
Versions from the Chianti region surrounding Florence often feature wild boar marinated specifically in Chianti wine, sometimes with the addition of local herbs like nepitella (wild mint).
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Pappardelle al Cinghiale dei Colli Fiorentini
(Pappardelle al Cinghiale dei Colli Fiorentini)
Preparations from the Florentine hills sometimes incorporate local olive oil pressed from the surrounding groves, adding a distinctive peppery finish.
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Pappardelle al Cinghiale con Crostini
(Pappardelle al Cinghiale con Crostini)
A presentation style in some traditional Florentine restaurants where the pasta is served alongside small crostini topped with a chicken liver pâté, offering contrasting flavors.
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Pappardelle Strette al Cinghiale
(Pappardelle Strette al Cinghiale)
Some historic Florentine establishments serve a narrower version of pappardelle (closer to fettuccine width) claiming this is the more traditional Florentine proportion.
Cultural context
History
This dish epitomizes Tuscan 'cucina povera' (poor cooking) philosophy, utilizing the abundant wild boar that has roamed Tuscan forests since Etruscan times. Historically, hunting wild boar was both a necessity for controlling the animal population and for providing protein to rural communities. The tradition of pairing game with wide pappardelle pasta dates back centuries, as the substantial noodles were designed specifically to hold hearty, rustic sauces. The dish gained prominence in medieval Tuscany when wild game hunting was a noble pursuit, and the recipes were refined during the Renaissance in Florence, a period that saw significant culinary development under Medici patronage.
Local significance
In Florence, this dish represents the perfect marriage of the city's sophisticated culinary tradition with the rustic hunting culture of the surrounding Tuscan countryside.
Eating customs
- Florentines typically eat this as a first course ('primo piatto'), followed by a second course of meat or contorni (vegetable sides).
- It's traditional to pair it with local Chianti Classico or other Tuscan red wines.
- Always eaten with a fork only, twirling the wide noodles rather than cutting them.