It’s Easter weekend and that means there’s lots of Italian treats around. One of my favorites is fraguni. We made our fraguni yesterday,so I wanted to share the recipe and some photos with you.
I want to start with an example of the diversity of Italian cooking from region to region and town to town. My parents grew up about 5 miles apart in Calabria and in my dad’s family,“i fraguni”were made mostly with ricotta and sugar as a dessert,whereas in my mother’s family,they were made mostly of potatoes and salty ingredients. I haven’t tried the ricotta/sugar fraguni as my mother is the one that has always made them in our family (dad’s the sopressata guy) but I’m sure they are equally as good.
We made 40-50 fraguni yesterday and this is the ingredients we used:
For the filling:
- 8 lb of Russet potatoes
- 3 lb of ricotta
- 1.5 lb of sopressata and/or cooked ham (we used both)
- 5 hard boiled eggs diced
- 4 raw eggs
- 1 cup of grated parmigiano
- 3 cups of shredded mozzarella
- 2 tablespoons of salt
Dough for the Crust:
- 5 lb bag of all purpose flour
- 3 eggs
- 1/2 cup of oil
- 1 tablespoon of salt
- 2 cups of milk
- 1.5 quarts of water
We start by making the filling: Boil your potatoes with the skin still intact (do not peel them) until fully cooked. The reason you want to boil them with the skin is that you want the potatoes to be dry. The skin helps prevent the potatoes from absorbing water. Once the potatoes are fully cooked,then you will need to peel them. This can easily be done with your hands (I use the word “easily”loosely:)
Crush or mash the potatoes in a large bowl:We use a contraption that I don’t know the name of but it works wonders. If anyone knows what it is,please feel free to comment. Here’s a picture of it.
Add the remaining filling ingredients into the bowl and mix them all together. Set the filling aside.

Dough for your Crust:Mix the ingredients for your crust in a large bowl. If the dough seems too dry,add a splash of water. Once you’ve made your dough for your crust,you’ll be ready to roll (literally!)
Cut your dough into several manageable pieces and roll each piece out flat. It should be about 1/16 of an inch thick when it’s ready. The dough will be elastic but keep at it. Don’t worry about the shape of your piece of dough as you will need to cut out small circles. We use a tea cup saucer to cut our circular pieces of dough (see photo below.) Feel free to use anything you feel comfortable with as long as it’s about the same size.
Now that you have your circular pieces of dough cut out,you can add a scoop of filling (approximately 1/2 cup.) We usually cut 8-12 circles,fill them and then repeat as they won’t all fit in the oven at the same time (with 40-50 fraguni it takes up a good part of the day.)
Once you add a scoop of filling,pinch the edges of the dough all around to make a boarder (see below.)
Place your finished fraguni on a baking tray or cookie sheet with a piece of tin foil sprinkled with flour and put them in the oven at 375 degrees for 45 minutes to 1 hour. Your fraguni should be a golden brown when they’re ready. We usually have 2 baking trays in the oven at the same time and switch the trays from top to bottom half way through. Enjoy and Buona Pasqua!




I fraguni look yummy! That contraption looks like a potato ricer to me. It’s supposed to be a gentler way of mashing up potatoes. I’ve seen it used for making gnocchi.
Buona Pascua a lei!
~Rose in Cali
Yum! I wish I had someone to cook that for me! (I could do it myself but it would be sooo nice to watch someone else cook for once!
Buona Pasqua,Joe! Yes,that’s a ricer.
The recipe sounds like an opened Pizza Rustica,but these are adorable and I bet they are delicious as well
See,you’re on a roll,recipe guy! Buona Pasqua to you and yours,now get back in that kitchen! Amanda
These look and sound delicious Joe! I love all the large quantities you make,my family’s like that too.
Great post! See,that’s what I love about the cuisine here because like you said,the diversity of Italian cooking from region to region and town to town. One of my sardinian bloggy friends told me about something called pardulas –they look like smaller versions of your fraguni with a sweet/tangy ricotta filling flavored with saffron. I love the pinched edges.
BTW,if you wanted to know the italian word for that kitchen gadget…it’s schiacciapatate. Happy Easter!
Rose –thanks for identifying that old thing…time for a new one.
Niki –it is nice to have someone else do it. The eating is the best part anyway!
Hi Maryann,we made that too:) I’ll post a pic soon.
Amanda –yes ma’am! I’ve had enough kitchen for a while:)
Yes Marie…Italian’s always cook as if 40 people are coming to dinner when in reality it’s 10.
Rowena –schiacciapatate –of course! when in doubt…. spell it out.
Fraguni?? Wow! I’m discovering italian food I’ve never heard of! Great blog,thanks for sharing and keep up the good work!
Thanks for stopping by Silvia. I’ll head over and check out your blog soon. As you know,Italian food is so regional/local not to mention,everyone has their own name for the same foods!
These are lovely
I have to ask you if your Mom makes zeppuli with a yeast flour &riced boiled potato dough and fried with anchovies in the middle? My mother-in-law made them that way and she was never able to give me a recipe.
Thanks!
Pat
Hi Pat,My mother makes something similar. We call them grispelle. She makes doughnut ones and balls with anchovies in them…. they do not have potatoes though.
We do the pizza rustica and the pizza gran but this one is new to me…and I like it a lot.
Thanks Joan! I hope you enjoy them as much as I do:)
I tried this for the first time when an Italian friend made them for me for Easter.Delish!
i love Italian Food specially those juicy pastas. They are really delicious.,,: