Saltimbocca appears as a signature dish in 1 Italy cities. See each city's local variant and where to eat it.
Saltimbocca alla romana · Rome
Saltimbocca alla romana is Rome's veal scaloppine: thin veal escalopes layered with prosciutto crudo and a sage leaf, pan-fried in butter and finished with a white-wine pan sauce. The dish jumps in the mouth.
Saltimbocca (literally jumps in the mouth) appears in Pellegrino Artusi's 1891 cookbook as a Roman dish, though the technique of veal-with-prosciutto pan-fried under sage is older and likely Lazio-rural in origin. The 20th-century trattoria form sets the recipe: thin veal escalopes (about 80g each), a slice of San Daniele or Parma prosciutto, a single sage leaf pinned with a wooden toothpick. Butter pan, brief cook, white wine deglaze. Felice a Testaccio, Armando al Pantheon, Matricianella and the city's bistro canon all serve the dish; the no-flour version (avoiding the saucy gravy) is considered the canonical Roman form.
Where to eat in Rome:
- Felice a Testaccio
- Matricianella
- Armando al Pantheon
- Trattoria Da Teo