Piadina – Ancient Roman Flatbread (Roman Feast Bread Recipe)
This dish was served as part of the Push for Pennsic 2004 – Early Roman Feast.
Originally published: June 29, 2025 at 4:14 PM | Updated: May 19, 2026
Updated 5/19/2026: This post has been expanded to current Give It Forth standards with additional Roman bread history, feast service notes, Pennsic and camp cooking guidance, a recipe scaled for 8 diners, dietary notes, FAQ, internal links to the full Roman feast menu, and structured recipe data.
Piadina – Roman Flatbread
Course: Bread
Origin: Ancient Rome / Roman-inspired Italian flatbread tradition
Served: Warm or Room Temperature
Event: Push for Pennsic 2004 – Early Roman Feast
Historical Background
Piadina is a simple flatbread with roots in ancient Roman and Etruscan cuisine. Early references describe breads baked on hot stones or iron discs. Roman soldiers and farmers alike relied on this versatile bread, which could be prepared quickly without an oven. Today, its legacy continues in the flatbreads of central Italy.
Flatbreads occupy an important place in Roman food history because they are practical. Before every household had access to a built oven, doughs could be cooked on heated stones, tiles, hearth surfaces, pans, or griddles. Bread served not only as food, but also as a utensil, a scoop, a trencher-like base, and a way to carry sauces, cheeses, meats, olives, and vegetables from plate to mouth.
For a Roman-inspired feast, a simple griddle bread is one of the most useful dishes on the table. It supports nearly everything around it: moretum, olives, sausage, braised cucumbers, cabbage, chickpeas, smoked meats, and sweet dishes. It is filling without being fussy, and it can be made with a short ingredient list even when kitchen facilities are limited.
Bread at the Roman Table
Roman meals used bread in many ways. It could be served plainly, dipped in sauces, eaten with cheese, used to accompany pulses and vegetables, or paired with preserved and salted foods. In a feast setting, bread also helps balance richer dishes. A bite of flatbread softens the intensity of fish sauce, garlic, olives, smoked meat, or heavily seasoned sausage.
This is why Piadina works so well in the Push for Pennsic Roman menu. It is not merely a side dish. It is the edible architecture of the meal: a carrier for spreads, a companion for sausages, and a reliable anchor for the rest of the course.
Modern Interpretation
This version of piadina uses only basic ingredients: flour, fat, salt, and water. It cooks quickly on a griddle or open fire, making it ideal for period events with limited kitchen access.
Olive oil keeps the bread vegetarian, vegan, and dairy-free, while lard gives a richer and more tender result. Either choice works well. For a Roman-inspired feast, olive oil is the more flexible option, especially if serving guests with dietary restrictions.
- No oven needed: Cook on a griddle, skillet, cast iron pan, or clean flat cooking surface.
- Good for primitive sites: The dough uses simple pantry ingredients and can be mixed by hand.
- Make-ahead friendly: Cook ahead and rewarm briefly on a dry pan or grill.
- Feast service: Stack wrapped breads in a towel to keep them warm and flexible.
- Sharing: Serve whole for tearing, or cut into halves or wedges for a dayboard or appetizer table.
