Cassoeula
A pot of cassoeula  | |
| Alternative names | Cazzoeula (in Lombard), cassola, cazzuola, cazzola, bottaggio (in Italian) | 
|---|---|
| Course | Secondo (Italian course) | 
| Place of origin | Italy | 
| Region or state | Lombardy | 
| Associated cuisine | Italian (Lombard) | 
| Main ingredients | Savoy cabbage, pork ribs, skin, trotters, head, etc. | 
Cassoeula or cazzoeula (Western Lombard: [kaˈ(t)søːla, kaˈtsøːra]), sometimes Italianized as cassola, cazzuola or cazzola (the word for 'trowel', etymologically unrelated), or bottaggio (probably derived from the French word potage), is a typical winter dish popular in western Lombardy, Italy, chiefly made from pork and Savoy cabbage. The dish has a strong, decisive flavour, and was a favourite of conductor Arturo Toscanini. One writer describes it as a "noble, ancient Milanese dish", and writes of the inexpressible "pleasure that it furnishes the soul as well as the palate, especially on a wintry day".