Province of Salerno Food & Wine Guide: Local Cuisine, Markets & Wine Estates
There are places in Italy that cook to impress, and places that cook because they have always cooked, because the land insists on it, because the alternative would be unthinkable. The Province of Salerno belongs emphatically to the second category. This is a territory that stretches from the Amalfi Coast’s cliffside lemon groves down through the ancient Greek settlements of Paestum and into the vast, unhurried wilderness of the Cilento – and at every turn, it produces ingredients of a quality that the rest of Italy quietly envies and the rest of the world rarely gets to taste at source. It does not have the global name recognition of Tuscany or the culinary swagger of Naples. What it has instead is something rarer: absolute, unself-conscious excellence on the plate. Come hungry. Stay longer than you planned.
The Regional Cuisine: What You Need to Know Before You Eat
The cooking of the Province of Salerno defies easy summary, which is one of its greatest pleasures. This is not a single cuisine but a layered conversation between coast and mountain, between Greek antiquity and medieval Arab influence, between fishing villages and agricultural heartlands. The Amalfi Coast brings sfusato lemons – those extraordinary elongated fruits with thick, fragrant peel – into everything from pasta to pastry to the ubiquitous limoncello that appears on every terrace at sunset, whether you asked for it or not. Inland, the tone shifts entirely. In the Cilento, cooking becomes earthier, more ancient: legumes, foraged greens, slow-braised meats, and the kind of bread that reminds you bread used to be serious business.
The foundations of what the world now calls the Mediterranean Diet were actually documented here, in these hills and along this coastline, when the American physiologist Ancel Keys famously spent decades studying the long-lived residents of Cilento villages. The locals were not particularly surprised by his findings. They had simply been eating well for several thousand years and saw no reason to stop. Buffalo mozzarella from the plains around Paestum is not a regional specialty in the way that truffles in Umbria are a specialty – it is more like a birthright, consumed fresh, within hours of production, in a way that vacuum-packed imitations in supermarkets worldwide have been failing to replicate ever since.
Signature Dishes Worth Seeking Out
Begin, always, with the mozzarella di bufala campana. In Paestum and the Piana del Sele, this is not the mild, slightly rubbery affair you may have encountered elsewhere. Eaten within a day of production – ideally that morning – it is yielding, milky, faintly sour, with a porcelain skin that gives way to warm liquid curd. It asks for nothing more than good olive oil, salt, and possibly a ripe tomato that has actually been allowed to ripen.
The San Marzano tomato, grown in the volcanic soils north of the province, deserves its own moment of respectful silence. Used in the province’s pasta sauces, it delivers a sweetness and low acidity that explains why serious pizza makers worldwide spend considerable sums importing it. Locally, it is simply Tuesday.
Along the coast, look for scialatielli – a thick, hand-cut pasta particular to the Amalfi area, traditionally made with milk rather than water, served with seafood that was most likely in the sea that morning. Pezzogna (red snapper) baked in a salt crust, or acqua pazza (fish poached in a light tomato and herb broth) – deceptively simple preparations that depend entirely on the quality of what’s in them. In the Cilento, seek out lagane e cicciari, a wide pasta with chickpeas that dates to Roman times and tastes as though it has earned every year of its history. Ficotto – a fig-based syrup used in both sweet and savoury applications – is a Cilento curiosity worth tracking down.
The Wines of the Province of Salerno
Campania is, without exaggeration, one of Italy’s most exciting wine regions, and the Province of Salerno sits at its southern heart. The wines produced here are serious, distinctive, and still undervalued on the international market – a situation that will not last indefinitely, so the moment to discover them is now, preferably in situ, on a terrace with a view of something extraordinary.
The key denomination here is Cilento DOC, covering whites, rosés, and reds from the hilly interior. Aglianico is the dominant red grape – ancient, possibly Greek in origin, capable of producing wines of considerable depth and tannic structure when handled well. Fiano di Avellino’s southern cousin, Fiano, also appears in the province in more mineral, sun-soaked expressions. Look also for wines made from Piedirosso and, increasingly, for producers working with older indigenous varieties that were nearly lost and are now being quietly, carefully revived.
The wine estates of the Cilento tend toward the boutique end of the scale – family-run operations farming difficult hillside terrain with a conviction that is either deeply admirable or mildly quixotic, depending on your perspective. Many welcome visitors for tastings and cellar tours, often with the kind of hospitality that involves sitting down with the winemaker’s family and eating lunch before you have quite agreed to stay for lunch. This is not a problem. When visiting wine estates in this part of the world, build the afternoon in as a sunk cost from the start.
For sparkling wine enthusiasts, Furore on the Amalfi Coast produces a respected DOC white that pairs with local seafood in a way that feels less like a pairing and more like an inevitability. The coastline’s microclimate – warm days, cool nights, salt air – produces grapes of genuine character.
Food Markets: Where the Province Reveals Itself
If you want to understand a place before you eat in it, start at its market. The Province of Salerno delivers several worth prioritising. Salerno city’s covered market and its street market along the waterfront offer the full range of provincial produce: buffalo mozzarella arriving by the cool-box from Paestum, crates of sfusato lemons, dried figs, cured meats from mountain farms, ceramics from Vietri sul Mare if you feel the need for something to carry home and subsequently worry about breaking.
In Agropoli, the twice-weekly market serves the local population rather than the tourist trade, which means the produce is exceptional and the prices are what they should be. Small producers bring vegetables from their own plots, cheeses made in modest quantities, and the kind of seasonal specificity – a particular type of bean, a variety of wild green – that supermarkets have systematically abolished. Wandering it slowly, with no particular agenda, is one of the better free activities the province offers.
The Cilento’s smaller town markets – held on rotating days across the interior – operate on a similar principle. They are functional, unselfconscious, and entirely genuine. A world away from the curated “artisan food markets” that have colonised every European city centre. Nobody here is selling scented candles alongside the cheese.
Olive Oil: Liquid Gold, Not a Cliché
The Cilento produces some of the finest extra-virgin olive oil in southern Italy, and the phrase “finest extra-virgin olive oil” is here being used with full awareness of how heavily it is deployed across the Italian culinary landscape. The distinction is real. The province is home to centuries-old olive groves – some trees are genuinely ancient, their trunks twisted into shapes that suggest long institutional memory – and the DOP-protected Cilento olive oil has a flavour profile that moves between grassy and fruity with a peppery finish that signals genuine polyphenol content.
Several estate producers offer olive oil tourism in the autumn harvest season (typically October to November): tours of the groves, visits to the mill during pressing, and the ritual of tasting the freshly pressed oil on bread still warm from the oven. It is one of those experiences that sounds modest and turns out to be genuinely moving. The oil at this point – vivid green, almost fluorescent, intensely flavoured – bears almost no resemblance to the olive oil most people use at home. This, too, is not a problem you will mind discovering.
Cooking Classes and Culinary Experiences
Learning to cook in the Province of Salerno is less about formal instruction and more about being absorbed into someone else’s kitchen and paying attention. The best cooking experiences here tend to begin at a market, move to a farmhouse or coastal home, and unfold over several hours with wine at various stages of the process. Mozzarella-making classes in the Paestum area offer the particular satisfaction of understanding, at a practical level, how a stretch-curd cheese is formed – and also explain why the temperature of the curd matters more than any amount of technique. Pasta-making workshops along the Amalfi Coast focus on local forms: scialatielli, of course, and the hand-rolled pastas that vary from village to village in ways that locals find obvious and visitors find delightful.
A number of agriturismi in the Cilento offer cooking experiences built around the actual working rhythms of the farm: bread-baking in wood-fired ovens, preserving seasonal produce, preparing the legume-and-pasta combinations that form the backbone of the local table. These are not performances. The bread will be eaten. The preserved tomatoes will appear on the table at dinner. The connection between effort and result is direct in a way that is, in 2024, increasingly rare and therefore increasingly valuable.
For those seeking something more structured, cooking schools in Salerno city and along the coast offer half-day and full-day programmes with professional chefs, often including market visits and wine pairings. These tend toward the polished end of the spectrum – useful if you want specific technique, though some of the best culinary education in the province will happen informally, at a table, watching someone’s grandmother dress a salad.
Truffle Hunting in the Cilento
The Cilento does not have the truffle celebrity of Umbria or Alba – which means it also does not have the coach parties, the premium pricing structures, or the faint sense of theatre that has come to surround truffle hunting in more famous regions. What it does have is black truffles (Tuber melanosporum and the local Tuber brumale) in genuine abundance in its forested interior, and a tradition of truffle hunting that predates the current gastronomic fashion by several centuries.
Organised truffle hunts with local hunters and trained dogs operate in the autumn and winter months, typically moving through oak and hazel woodland in the hills above the Cilento valleys. The experience is more elemental than its Umbrian equivalent – less curated, more genuinely agricultural – and the truffles, when found, tend to end up in simple preparations that allow the ingredient to do the work. Scrambled eggs, fresh pasta, bruschetta. The cooking here does not overcomplicate what the land provides.
The Best Food Experiences Money Can Buy
There are certain experiences in the Province of Salerno that sit at the intersection of extraordinary produce, exceptional settings, and the kind of unhurried service that money can provide but cannot entirely manufacture – it has to come from somewhere real.
A private boat lunch along the Amalfi Coast, with seafood bought at the morning market in Cetara (a fishing village famous for its colatura di alici – an aged anchovy sauce that is essentially the contemporary expression of ancient Roman garum), prepared by a private chef and eaten on deck with the cliffs above and the water below, represents a particular kind of perfection. Cetara’s colatura, incidentally, is used in tiny quantities to season pasta and vegetables across the region – a few drops doing the work of complex seasoning – and is one of those ingredients that makes you reconsider how much of what you thought you knew about flavour.
A private dinner at a buffalo mozzarella farm in the Piana del Sele, arranged through the estate, with production in the morning and dinner in the evening – mozzarella in every form, from fresh to smoked to baked – is another experience that rewards forward planning. The buffalo themselves are, if you are interested, extremely large and surprisingly personable. This is not strictly relevant to the food, but it is worth knowing.
Wine dinners at Cilento estates, private olive oil tastings at ancient groves, foraging walks with local botanists followed by meals constructed entirely from what has been gathered: these are the experiences that make the province’s food and wine culture feel not like consumption but like participation. Which is, ultimately, the highest thing you can say about any culinary destination.
For the complete picture of what makes this province so singular – its history, its landscapes, its character – see our full Province of Salerno Travel Guide, which sets the table, so to speak, for everything described above.
Stay Well, Eat Better
The food and wine of the Province of Salerno rewards proximity. You want to be close to the lemon groves, close to the buffalo farms, close to the fishing boats coming in at Cetara or Agropoli at first light. A private villa – with a kitchen to bring market produce home to, a terrace to open the Cilento wine on, and the space to live at the pace the province requires – transforms a good trip into something considerably more generous. Browse our collection of luxury villas in Province of Salerno and find the base that puts the best of this table within easy reach.