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I first tasted Nutella when I was a kid, at the house of a Dutch friend whose relatives would bring it to Canada in suitcases from Europe. To my 10-year-old self, this chocolate-hazelnut spread was a miracle food.
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I first tasted Nutella when I was a kid, at the house of a Dutch friend whose relatives would bring it to Canada in suitcases from Europe. To my 10-year-old self, this chocolate-hazelnut spread was a miracle food.
Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 29/05/2013 (4791 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
I first tasted Nutella when I was a kid, at the house of a Dutch friend whose relatives would bring it to Canada in suitcases from Europe. To my 10-year-old self, this chocolate-hazelnut spread was a miracle food.
It tasted like chocolate icing. Even more improbably, it possessed a magical property that hypnotized adults into letting children eat it for breakfast.
Developed in the Piedmont region of Italy, an area known for its hazelnuts, Nutella was first manufactured commercially in 1964 by the Italian company Ferrero. Though it quickly became the most popular chocolate-hazelnut spread in Europe, Nutella was initially hard to track down here in Canada.
These days, Nutella for the North American market is manufactured in Brantford, Ont., and is a common sight on Canadian supermarket shelves.
It would be even more common if Nutella superfan Sara Rosso had her way. An American blogger living in Rome, Rosso instituted an unofficial World Nutella Day on Feb. 5, 2007, as a celebration of all things chocolatey and hazelnutty. Her Nutella-centric website (www.nutelladay.com), Facebook page and Twitter account have become destinations for Nutella-obsessed foodies looking for recipes and ideas.
The whole setup was as sweet as a Nutella s’mores bar, at least until May 20, when Rosso received a cease-and-desist letter from Ferrero concerning unauthorized use of its intellectual property and trademarks. It looked as if the website was in jeopardy, another victim of a big corporation trying to shut down crowd-sourced, fan-run social media.
This seemed like an especially tone-deaf and self-defeating move by Ferrero, since Rosso clearly adores Nutella and was basically doing unpaid Nutella outreach.
Fortunately, a messy hazelnut-and-chocolate meltdown was averted. Rosso reported in an open letter posted on May 21 that a “positive resolution” had been reached. A release from Ferrero likewise reported “positive direct contact” between the company and Rosso and expressed its gratitude for her devotion to its brand.
So the website’s trove of recipes is safe. Over the years, Rosso has brought together hundreds of recipes for Nutella-inflected cookies, brownies, tarts, cakes, candies, ice cream and puddings, along with a very short, very weird section of savoury recipes. (Um… butternut squash ravioli with Nutella sauce? Nutella-marinated steak? Could there be a limit to the miraculous powers of Nutella?)
Nutella’s smooth blend of nuts and chocolate does make a great base for desserts. Take Nigella Lawson’s Nutella cake (which is also called Torta alla Giandula, proving conclusively that everything sounds better in Italian). This dense, dark cake starts with a whole jar of Nutella, adds more bittersweet chocolate and finishes with the crunch of whole hazelnuts. Delicious.
And if you’re still a little mad at Ferrero and want to strike a blow against Big Choco-Hazelnut Spread, you can make your own homemade version of Nutella with a recipe adapted from Bon Appetit. A powerful, pure concentration of hazelnuts, bittersweet chocolate and butterfat, this recipe that would make a Piedmontese grandmother happy.
Phil Hossack / Winnipeg Free Press
Nigella’s Nutella Cake
6 large eggs, separated
Pinch salt
125 ml (1/2 cup) unsalted butter, softened
1 x 375 g jar Nutella (about 13 oz or 1 1/3 cup)
5 ml (1 tbsp) Frangelico, rum, or water
125 ml (1/2 cup) ground hazelnuts
112 g (4 oz) bittersweet chocolate, melted and cooled
Icing:
100 g (about 3 1/2 oz) whole hazelnuts
125 ml (1/2 cup) heavy cream
15 ml (1 tbsp) Frangelico, rum, or water
112 g (4 oz) bittersweet chocolate
Preheat the oven to 175 C (350 F). Butter and line with parchment paper a 23 cm (9 inch) round springform pan. In a large bowl, whisk the egg whites and salt until stiff but not dry. In a separate bowl, beat the butter and Nutella together, and then add the Frangelico (or whatever you’re using), egg yolks and ground hazelnuts. Fold in the cooled, melted chocolate, then lighten the mixture with a large dollop of egg white, which you can beat in as roughly as you want, before gently folding the rest of them in a third at a time. Pour into prepared pan and cook for 40 minutes or until the cake’s beginning to come away at the sides, then let cool on a rack.
To make icing: Toast the hazelnuts in a dry frying pan over medium heat until the aroma wafts upwards and the nuts are golden-brown in parts: keep shaking the pan so that they don’t burn on one side and stay too pallid on others. Transfer to a plate and let cool. (This is imperative: if they go on the ganache while hot, it’ll turn oily.)
In a small heavy-bottomed saucepan, add the cream, liqueur or water and chopped chocolate, and heat gently over low heat. Once the chocolate’s melted, take the pan off the heat and cool, whisking occasionally, until the mixture reaches the right consistency to ice the top of the cake. Unmould the cooled cake carefully, leaving it on the base as it will be too difficult to get such a damp cake off in one piece. Ice the top with the chocolate icing, and dot thickly with the whole toasted hazelnuts. If you have used Frangelico, put shot glasses on the table and serve it with the cake.
— adapted from How To Be a Domestic Goddess
Tester’s notes: This is a “damp cake,” as Nigella says, so it’s not going to be lofty and exquisite. Instead it’s perfectly imperfect, a fairly flat little cake that sags a bit in the middle but has incredibly moist texture and deep chocolatey taste.
Phil Hossack / Winnipeg Free Press
Nigella's Nutella Cake is a 'perfectly imperfect' delight with incredibly moist texture and deep chocolatey taste.
Better Than Nutella Chocolate Hazelnut Spread
500 ml (2 cups) hazelnuts, preferably skinned (about 10 oz)
60 ml (1/4 cup) granulated sugar
454 g (1 lb) semisweet or bittersweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
125 ml (1/2 cup) unsalted butter, cut into 2.5 cm (1 inch) pieces, room temperature
250 ml (1 cup) heavy cream
3 ml (3/4 tsp) kosher salt, or 1 ml (1/4 tsp) regular salt
Preheat oven to 175 C (350 F). Spread out nuts on a rimmed baking sheet or in an oven-proof skillet. Roast, shaking sheet once for even toasting, until deep brown, about 13-15 minutes. Let cool completely. (If nuts have skins, rub them in a kitchen towel to remove.) Grind hazelnuts and sugar in a food processor until a fairly smooth, buttery paste forms, about 1-3 minutes. Place chocolate in a medium metal bowl. Set bowl over a large saucepan of simmering water; stir often until chocolate is melted and smooth. Remove bowl from over saucepan; add butter and whisk until completely incorporated. Whisk in cream and salt, then hazelnut paste.
Pour the spread into four clean 250-ml (8-oz) jars, dividing equally. Let cool. (Spread will thicken and become soft and peanut butter-like as it cools.) Screw on lids. (Spread can be made up to 4 weeks ahead; keep chilled. Let stand at room temperature for 4 hours to soften. Can stand at room temperature up to 4 days.)
— adapted from Bon Appetit
Tester’s notes: Yum. Compared to a commercial spread, this spread has the texture of artisanal peanut butter, and the flavour is darker and deeper and far less sweet.
You’ll really want to find skinned hazelnuts, as getting the skins off by rubbing with a clean tea towel is fiddly work. I also found that I had to grind the hazelnuts and sugar for almost four minutes to get a really emulsified mixture. (One minute might work with a state-of-the-art food processor but my kitchen workhorse took a lot longer.) And you really need to get the hazelnuts creamy-smooth, otherwise the spread will be too grainy.
alison.gillmor@freepress.mb.ca
Erik M. Lunsford / St. Louis Post-Dispatch / MCT
Better than Nutella chocolate hazelnut spread
Alison Gillmor Writer
Studying at the University of Winnipeg and later Toronto’s York University, Alison Gillmor planned to become an art historian. She ended up catching the journalism bug when she started as visual arts reviewer at the Winnipeg Free Press in 1992.
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Alison Gillmor Writer
Studying at the University of Winnipeg and later Toronto’s York University, Alison Gillmor planned to become an art historian. She ended up catching the journalism bug when she started as visual arts reviewer at the Winnipeg Free Press in 1992.
Now that looked like Winnipeg Blue Bombers football.
It wasn’t always pretty, but the Blue and Gold finally sent their droves of paying customers home happy with a 30-21 win over the visiting Toronto Argonauts on Friday.
“Osh was on it all week that we had to have a great three-phase game and tonight we did that,” said left tackle Stanley Bryant.
“If we can do that each and every week, we will be a great team.”
Manitoba’s independent teacher commissioner is investigating the head coach of the Grant Park Pirates football program amid allegations of team hazing.
The AAAA varsity team is at the centre of a probe into allegations student-athletes who played for Doug Kovacs during the 2025-26 school year drew blood while carrying out a locker room ritual.
Multiple sources confirmed Kovacs was put on leave from Grant Park High School in the spring in response to a complaint about his coaching style.
“There’s a lot of different red flags here,” said one parent of a football player who was recently contacted about the case by the office of commissioner Noni Classen.
Maureen Scurfield4 minute readYesterday at 2:01 AM CDT
DEAR MISS LONELYHEARTS: I didn’t know my wife was in the house when I was talking to my brother on the phone about her new bathing suit “which makes her look like a tank.”
She walked up behind me while I was on the phone and said loudly, “I guess you won’t want to be having sex with a tank at the lake then!” No amount of apologizing is getting me past this one, it seems.
The temperature is rather frosty in our bedroom, and we leave for the lake in two weeks. Should I invite her to criticize my imperfect body? I don’t want to do that, or I’ll never be able to sleep with her again. Please help!
Trees may not have a vote, but they are poised to become among the biggest winners from this fall’s municipal elections in Winnipeg.
At the start of the week, things didn’t look good for Winnipeg’s tree population. City staff issued a report recommending city council reduce the 2026 urban forest renewal program and divert the money to improvements to the Assiniboine Park Conservancy’s Journey to Churchill exhibition.
The recommendation was triggered by a directive from the provincial government to take the same sum of money out of a strategic infrastructure fund it provides to the city to support the conservancy exhibit. This left the city with a $1.2-million hole in its infrastructure program. Staff felt the money could come from the tree-planting budget.
Mayor Scott Gillingham — who is running for re-election this fall — initially endorsed the recommendation when it was put before the executive policy committee (which he chairs) earlier this week. Seventy-two hours later, however, Gillingham was having second thoughts.
The 51st annual Winnipeg Folk Festival had yet to commence, but festivities in the campground were already in full swing.
The festival campground opened early Wednesday morning and provides a temporary home to more than 6,000 residents during the four-day music festival at Birds Hill Provincial Park.
By Thursday afternoon, the area had been transformed into a sea of colourful tents and trailers. A steady stream of campers could be seen hauling wagons from the parking lot loaded with essentials: coolers and tarps, sleeping bags and sunscreen.
Scott Billeck5 minute readYesterday at 6:00 AM CDT
The Manitoba Métis Federation has taken another major step in its effort to help revitalize downtown Winnipeg by acquiring the former National Research Council property on Ellice Avenue.
The federation has scheduled a news conference today to announce it has purchased the office tower, laboratory and parking lot at 435-445 Ellice Ave. The acquisition expands its downtown footprint to more than one million square feet of owned property and will eventually house about 70 per cent of its 1,300 employees.
The sale ends a years-long legal dispute between the federation and the research council. The federation had sued the federal agency after an earlier agreement to purchase the property collapsed in 2020.
“Everybody’s happy, they’re happy, we’re happy. And now we just got to start the transition of our plan,” federation president David Chartrand told the Free Press Thursday.