Tavola Piena means “a full table.” While our ceramics are being made in Italy, we’re sharing the recipes that bring that table to life.
The only purpose of a plate is to be filled.
Ribolita
Ribollita is one of the great dishes of rural Tuscany. Its name literally means “reboiled,” a reflection of how the dish is traditionally prepared. The soup begins as a brothy vegetable and bean soup served on the first day, often ladled over toasted bread in each bowl. The next day it is reheated and more bread is added directly to the pot, transforming the soup into the thick, rustic dish that gives ribollita its distinctive character.
In that way, ribollita is really two meals in one. The first day it is a hearty but brothy soup, perfect for soaking up with good bread. By the second day, the bread has absorbed the broth and the soup becomes richer and thicker, almost like a stew. It’s a practical and delicious example of how Italian cooking often turns yesterday’s meal into something even better the next day.
Homemade Potato Gnocchi (Classic Italian Method)
Few dishes feel more like a full Italian table than a bowl of freshly made gnocchi. Soft, pillowy, and delicate, they sit somewhere between pasta and dumpling. Traditionally made with potatoes, flour, and egg, gnocchi come together quickly and are meant to carry whatever sauce follows—whether a slow Sunday ragù or something as simple as butter and Parmesan.
Once your table is set, this is the kind of dish that fills it.