Recipes & Lore • Bakery Counter Canon
Italian Pepper Biscuits
In most of America a "biscuit" is soft and buttered. In a Rhode Island Italian bakery, a pepper biscuit is a hard, crunchy, savory ring loaded with coarse black pepper — closer to a rustic cracker than to anything served with gravy. They're sold by the bag next to the register, eaten with wine, cheese, and antipasto, and stashed in pantries across the state the way other places stash pretzels. Like pizza strips, they're a food you don't realize is regional until you move away and can't find them.
You need
- 3 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 tbsp baking powder
- 1¼ tsp salt
- 2 tsp coarsely ground black pepper — coarse, and don't be shy
- 1 tsp fennel seeds (optional but traditional)
- ½ cup olive oil
- ¾ cup dry white wine (or water — but the wine is doing something)
Method
- Heat the oven to 350°F. Whisk the flour, baking powder, salt, pepper, and fennel.
- Stir in the oil and wine until a firm dough forms, then knead a minute or two until smooth.
- Pinch off walnut-sized pieces, roll each into a 5-inch rope, and press the ends together into a ring. Uniformity is for factories.
- Bake on parchment 25–30 minutes, until golden and dry all the way through. The test: a proper pepper biscuit snaps. If it bends, it goes back in.
- Cool completely and store airtight. They keep for weeks — durability is a feature, not an accident. Serve with sharp provolone, soppressata, olives, and something red in a glass.
Sources & further reading
- D. Palmieri's Bakery — Biscuits
- Italian Bakeries in Rhode Island That Keep Old-World Recipes Alive
- Italian Pepper Biscuits — a Rhode Island bakery-style recipe
Send the bakery shelf
Pepper biscuits actually do survive the mail — sealed bakery snacks like these are exactly the kind of local find we pack into the Rhode Island Survival Kit.
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