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Castelluccio Lentils
Castelluccio Lentils are brownish-green lentils. They are very small and light: 1000 of these lentils weighs only 23g (some estimates say 25 to 26g.)

They don't need soaking, and holds their shape during cooking. They are sold with their skin on.

The lentils are named after Castelluccio, Umbria in the Apennine mountains of Italy. The area is surrounded by a peaty plateau. The farmers practice field rotation: lentils, cereals, and a year of rest.

The seed for the lentils is planted in April and May. The the plants grow 8 to 16 inches (20 to 40 cm ) high, and are harvested at the end of July or beginning of August.

Though much of the harvesting is done by hand in order not to knock all the lentils to the ground, farmers are experimenting with special threshing machines that might be delicate enough to do it. The plants are harvested before the pods get too dry, so that all the seeds don't easily jostle out of them, then laid out in the field to finish drying.

Then, they are threshed and sorted by hand.

To locals, they are sold in jute bags or in cardboard. For export and retail sale, they are packed in plastic bags of 250g, 500g or 1 kg.

Castelluccio Lentils sell in North America for about twice the price of ordinary lentils.

Castelluccio Lentils received their European PGI status on 13 June 1997. The PGI area is in the Apennines, centred in the Umbria region, down to the south of the Marche. The PGI is administered by the "Cooperativa della Lenticchia di Castellucio" in Norcia. The packaging on the lentils says, "Lenticchia di Castelluccio di Norcia - Indicazione Geografica Protetta."

Also called: Lenticchie di Castelluccio (Italian)


See Also
Protected Geographic Indication

Other entries for Lentils
Beluga Lentils, Blue Lentils, Brown Lentils, Castelluccio Lentils, Colfiorito Lentils, Green du Berry Lentils, Ivory Lentils, Lentils, Marrone Lentils, Petite Crimson Lentils, Petite Golden Lentils, Red Chief Lentils, Red Lentils, Spanish Pardina Lentils, Urad Dal

Other entries for Legumes
Beans, Peas, Soybeans

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