Chocolate salami


Chocolate salami is a Portuguese, and Italian dessert made from cocoa, broken biscuits, butter, eggs and a bit of port wine or rum. The dessert became popular across Europe and elsewhere, often losing alcohol as an ingredient along the way. One example of such equivalent dish is Lithuanian desert tinginys, which is made out of cocoa, broken biscuits, condensed milk and butter, and sometimes nuts, however alternative recipes exist under the same name of the dish.
Chocolate salami is not a meat product. The appellation "salami" stems from physical resemblance. Like salami, chocolate salami is formed as a long cylinder and is sliced across into discs for serving. These discs are a brown, chocolaty matrix peppered with bright bits of cookie. In Portugal, they are typically made using Marie biscuit. Some varieties also contain chopped nuts, such as almonds or hazelnuts and may be shaped like truffles.
In Greece, chocolate salami is called Mosaiko or Kormos.
In Turkey, it is called Mosaic Cake.
In Romania, it is called biscuit salami, and it may have originated during the 1970s or 1980s in the communist era, possibly as a result of food shortages.
In Uruguay, it is called chocolate saucisson.
In Italy, it is also called English salami