Pane cafone—literally 'peasant bread' or 'bumpkin bread'—is the ancestral bread of Naples and the wider Campania region, a large, crusty, irregular loaf with a thick dark crust and a soft, airy, slightly sour crumb that has sustained the region's population for centuries. The name, which might seem pejorative, is worn as a badge of honour: this is honest bread, bread without pretension, bread that does its job magnificently. The traditional version is made from a simple dough of type 0 or type 1 wheat flour (sometimes blended with a small percentage of semolina for colour and flavour), water, salt, and natural yeast (lievito madre/pasta madre—a sourdough starter maintained across generations). The dough is mixed minimally, given a long, slow fermentation (12-24 hours at cool room temperature), and baked in a wood-fired oven at fierce heat. The result is a loaf weighing 1-2 kg with a crust so thick and dark it's nearly black in patches, achieved by the intense radiant heat of the wood oven and the long bake time. The crumb is open, irregular, and moist—not the uniform, airy crumb of a French pain de campagne but something more robust and chewy, with a subtle tang from the natural fermentation. The defining characteristic of pane cafone is its extraordinary shelf life: properly made, the loaf remains edible for four to five days, the thick crust acting as a natural preservative. This longevity was essential for farming families who baked once a week. Day-old pane cafone is not inferior—it's the basis for dozens of Campanian dishes: panzanella, bruschetta, bread soup (acquacotta), and as the essential companion to impepata di cozze and soups, where its absorbent crumb soaks up broths and sauces. The bread represents a fundamental Neapolitan truth: the best things are the simplest, requiring only time, craft, and good ingredients.
Use natural sourdough starter (lievito madre). Long fermentation (12-24 hours). Bake at high heat for thick, dark crust. Large format loaf (1-2 kg). Minimal mixing—don't overwork the dough. The crust should be dark and substantial.
The sourdough starter's health determines the bread's character—feed it regularly. Bake on a stone or in a Dutch oven to simulate wood-fired conditions. Day-old pane cafone makes the best bruschetta. Wrap in cloth, not plastic, to preserve the crust. The bread freezes well when sliced.
Using commercial yeast (different flavour profile). Under-baking (crust too thin, won't keep). Over-mixing the dough. Not allowing sufficient fermentation time. Expecting uniform crumb (it should be irregular).
Carol Field, The Italian Baker; Katie Parla, Food of the Italian South