Nonna Betta – kosher style cuisine is an authentic Roman Jewish restaurant because I am an nth generation Roman Jew (perhaps even the little boy playing on the ground near a column in the photo) and Nonna Betta was actually my grandmother.
2 separate menus
Respecting the Judaic Talmud rule that forbids mixing meat with dairy – a verse of the Torah says “Do not cook a kid in its mother’s milk” – at Nonna Betta dishes can be chosen from two separate menus: one featuring meat dishes, and one featuring fish or cheese. Moreover, even modern nutrition suggests not mixing meat protein and dairy.
Seasonal dishes
Traditional dishes handed down by my grandmother are prepared express, using only seasonal ingredients. Among these, our famous fried platters, well loved for their feather-light texture. Aside from the variety with which they rotate, the oil employed for frying is used exclusively for cooking fresh vegetables and cod fillets only, that is never crustaceans or mollusks (that are prohibited) nor frozen products, which are totally missing from our pantry.
Typical cuisine and Middle Eastern specialties
Aside from our renowned dishes, made according to Nonna Betta’s teachings – carciofi alla giudìa (Jewish Roman-style fried artichokes), pezzetti fritti (assorted fried veggies), filetti di baccalà (battered cod fillets), fiori di zucca (zucchini flowers), amatriciana alla giudìa (Roman Jewish-style ‘amatriciana’ without pork), agnolotti col sugo di stracotto (ravioli stuffed pasta pockets dressed with a slow-cooked meat sauce), polpette col sedano (meatballs with celery), rigatoni con la pajata (pasta with veal intestines), aliciotti con l’indivia (baked fish and endive), baccalà a cipolla e pomodoro (stewed cod with onions and tomato), tagliolini cicoria e bottarga (tagliolini with dandelion greens and mullet roe), cacio e pepe con cicoria (cacio e pepe pasta with added stir-fried dandelion greens) – our restaurant also offers a selection of Middle Eastern specialties, like felafel, fish–, meat– or vegetable couscous; hummus and babaganoush. Typical sweets and desserts, which are all homemade, like our bread and fresh pasta, all are also worthy of mention.
The ghetto
Our restaurant is cozy and pleasant. On the walls are large reproductions of art depicting vignettes of daily life in the Rome Jewish Ghetto before the late 1800s demolitions (you can browse them in our Gallery section). In this place, immersed in a relaxed and welcoming setting, you can relive the stories of the Ghetto, and perhaps find answers to questions you “never dared to ask” regarding the Jewish culture, religion or the 2000 year-old presence of Jews in Rome.