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Principato di Lucedio | Ribe Brown Rice 500 g

 2,50

The Ribe brown rice is only partially hulled, and it contains more nutrients than white rice.
In Italian, the partially hulled rice is also called ‘sbramato di risone’.
Ribe brown rice suits all preparations, and it is excellent for salads and soups

WHAT MAKES IT SPECIAL
Principato di Lucedio rice is special for many reasons: the care in cultivation and processing, the natural environment in which it grows, in the heart of Piedmont, and the history of Lucedio, one of the first places where rice cultivation was started in Italy during the Middle Ages

Description

PRINCIPATO DI LUCEDIO RIBE BROWN RICE: COOKING

Ribe brown rice suits all preparations, and it is excellent for salads and soups.
Principato di Lucedio proposes a recipe for Ribe brown rice salad. Let's see it!

Ribe brown rice salad

Ingredients (serves 6):

  • 500g Ribe brown rice
  • 100g Emmenthaler cheese
  • 2 slices of ham 1.5cm thick
  • 150g of small-size black olives
  • 4 basil leaves
  • 1 red pepper
  • 1 yellow pepper
  • 8 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
  • Salt, pepper

Preparation:

  • Dice all the ingredients and add the olives.
  • Toss the rice in plenty of cold water with a little salt
  • Bring the water to boiling and let it cook for about 25 minutes
  • Drain and mix the rice with all the ingredients already prepared
  • Dress with extra virgin olive oil and season with basil and pepper

PRINCIPATO DI LUCEDIO RIBE BROWN RICE: INGREDIENTS AND PACKAGING

Ribe brown rice. Produced in Italy.
Packaged in protective atmosphere.
Store in a cool and dry place.

PRINCIPATO DI LUCEDIO RIBE BROWN RICE: NUTRITIONAL VALUES

Average quantity for 100 g:

  • Energy: 353 kcal (1494 kj)
  • Fat: 3,1 g
    • of which saturates: 0,6 g
  • Carbohydrate: 71 g
    • of which sugars: 0,7 g
  • Fibre: 4,5 g
  • Protein: 8 g
  • Salt: 0,02 g

The information on the label of the product may vary for reasons beyond our control. Therefore, there may be discrepancies between the information on the website and that on the product delivered. Please always check the information on the product before consumption or use.

LUCEDIO AND RICE GROWING

Principato di Lucedio rice has a centuries-old history.
At the beginning of the 12th century, the Vercelli plain north to the Po was largely covered by woods, scrubland, moorland, marshy lands.
The Cistercians had very advanced agricultural knowledge and techniques for the time. They created space by clearing the woods and other ground unsuitable for grazing.

At the beginning, rice was probably planted in the cloisters for medicinal purposes; then the monks realized that it also grew well in open fields. Perhaps, already in the fourteenth century, hundreds of hectares of rice were being grown.

Today “Principato di Lucedio" is a farm covering over 500 hectares.
The architectural complex of the Abbey is part of the Bosco delle Sorti della Partecipanza, a Piedmont Regional Park that protects one of the few remaining lowland forests.
The production process of the Principato di Lucedio rice, with a low environmental impact, and the packaging, without preservatives in modified atmosphere, guarantee brown Ribe rice and other products with high nutritional qualities.

PRINCIPATO DI LUCEDIO: LUCEDIO THROUGH THE CENTURIES

rincipato di Lucedio is located in Trino, in the province of Vercelli, in the heart of Piedmont.
The history of the Principato di Lucedio begins centuries ago. It was initially an abbey, the abbey of Lucedio, to then be secularized and, through various vicissitudes, become principality, the principality of Lucedio.

The monastery received important donations in the area of Vercelli and also in more distant territories and, over time, became a thriving center of economic and political power.

In 1784 Pius VI secularized the abbey and in 1800, with the French domination, the former abbey and almost all its assets were confiscated.

It was then owned by Napoleon’s brother-in-law, Prince Camillo Borghese, and subsequently, in 1818, was sold to a company composed of the Marquis Michele Benso di Cavour and Carlo Giovanni Gozzani of San Giorgio and Luigi Festa.

The marquis Gozzani of San Giorgio then left the Grangia of Lucedio and Montarolo in inheritance to his nephew Felice Carlo who, in 1861, ceded the property to the Genoese Raffaele de Ferrari, Duke of Galliera. Vittorio Emanuele II gave him the title of prince for services rendered to his country. The son of the Duke De Ferrari renounced the title and donated the property to his cousin, the Marquis Andrea Carrega Bertolini, whom the king granted to take the title of prince of Lucedio.

In 1937 Count Cavalli di Olivola bought the property. The daughter, the countess Rosetta Clara Cavalli d’Olivola Salvadori di Wiesenhoff, is the current owner.

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