A Secret Discovery About Tiramisù
The Italian Classic Dessert



But I digress, I need to tell the tiramisù secret.
At the end of a long aisle of cakes decorated with unbelievable confections, sat the king of desserts with all of its sumptuous layers vividly showcased. Who could resist? I looked more closely. There it was, as vividly as the cakes were beautiful, the layers in the tiramisù were made of the largest ladyfingers I’d ever seen. For years I had made my tiramisù with sponge cake so that we could have some cake in the mix, not just melted small ladyfingers and a lot of whipped cream. I honestly had never seen large biscottoni like this in our local stores.
This was the secret, to use larger ladyfingers called “Savoiardi” (no I can’t pronounce it).
I did find them in the couple of days I had left when I returned to Florence, at the elegant Rinascente Department Store in their gourmet grocery section. Chocolate and Vanilla Biscottoni they were called. They made it home without a crumble and the tiramisù I made using them was raved over by all. I agree the homemade biscuits made all the difference.
When I went to find the biscuits via Google, I was surprised at the number of recipes, not stores that came up, and used the recipe below with a couple alterations. And as though by magical ESP, the next time I went shopping, the larger “Savoiardi” were in the local grocery store!
Savoiardi

3 large organic eggs (room temperature and separated)
½ c granulated sugar (divided)
pinch of salt
1 tsp. vanilla extract
2 tsp. lemon juice (divided)
2 tsp. grated lemon or orange zest
½ c cake flour (sifted)
2 T potato starch
powdered sugar for dusting
Directions
Preheat oven to 350º.
Line two baking sheets with parchment paper. Prepare pastry bag (1/2” tip) or heavy plastic bag for piping.
In a medium bowl, beat the egg whites, 1/4 c of sugar and 1 teaspoon of lemon juice until stiff peaks form.
In another bowl, beat the egg yolks with the remaining sugar, citrus zest, vanilla extract, 1 teaspoon of lemon juice and salt until thick and light yellow.
Sift the flour and potato starch over the egg mixture and gently fold it in with a rubber spatula until smooth and well combined.
Gently fold in the egg whites.
Transfer half of the batter to the prepared piping bag. Pipe the batter into lines about4” long, keeping distance between them. Don’t worry if the ladyfingers are not shaped perfectly.
Repeat with the rest of the batter.
Sprinkle the cookies lightly with powdered sugar. Let them rest for about 5 minutes and sprinkle again with powdered sugar
Place the baking sheet in the oven and bake for about 15 minutes until lightly golden.
Let the ladyfingers cool for a few minutes then release them from the parchment paper, with a flat spatula

Betty is a California-based writer whose work explores local history, travel, food, and the people who shape community life. Her storytelling is rooted in curiosity, culture, and real-world experience.