30 Essential Italian Food Words Every Learner Needs
Master 30 must-know Italian food words — from pasta to gelato — grouped by meal course, with example sentences and gender notes.
Food is one of the best entry points into a new language. Italians talk about food constantly — at the table, in the market, in novels, and in everyday conversation. The words below aren't just useful for ordering a meal; they're the words you'll keep meeting in Italian books, films, and daily life. Learn these 30 and you'll have a solid foundation.
Italian nouns have grammatical gender — masculine or feminine. Each word below is listed with its article (il, la, lo, l') so you learn the gender from the start. This matters because adjectives and other words must agree with it.
The Structure of an Italian Meal
Before the words, it helps to know how Italian meals are organised. A full traditional meal has five courses, though most everyday meals skip some of them. Understanding these course names will help you read any Italian menu.
| Course | Italian | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Starter | l'antipasto (m) | literally "before the meal" |
| First course | il primo (m) | usually pasta, risotto, or soup |
| Second course | il secondo (m) | meat or fish |
| Side dish | il contorno (m) | vegetables or salad alongside the secondo |
| Dessert | il dolce (m) | sweets to finish |
Bread and Staples
These are the building blocks — the foods you'll encounter in almost every Italian meal and in countless Italian texts.
1. il pane — bread
Vuoi del pane?
Would you like some bread?
Pane ends in -e, which doesn't signal gender, but it is masculine. Always il pane.
2. la pasta — pasta
La pasta è pronta.
The pasta is ready.
Pasta is feminine (la pasta). The word covers the category of pasta dishes as well as the dough itself.
3. il riso — rice
Preferisco il riso al pane.
I prefer rice to bread.
4. il formaggio — cheese
Vuole del formaggio sul risotto?
Would you like some cheese on the risotto?
Formaggio is the general word for cheese. Specific cheeses (parmigiano, mozzarella, ricotta) are learned separately.
5. l'olio (m) — oil
Un po' di olio d'oliva, per favore.
A little olive oil, please.
Olio takes l' (masculine before a vowel). The full phrase olio d'oliva (olive oil) is what you'll see everywhere.
Pasta Dishes and the First Course
Italians treat pasta as its own world. Here are the names and forms you'll meet most often — both the dish names and key ingredients.
6. il risotto — risotto
Il risotto alla milanese ha lo zafferano.
Milanese risotto has saffron.
7. il pomodoro — tomato
La salsa di pomodoro è semplice ma buona.
The tomato sauce is simple but good.
Pomodoro literally means "golden apple" (pomo d'oro). The plural is i pomodori.
8. l'aglio (m) — garlic
Non mangio l'aglio.
I don't eat garlic.
Aglio takes l' because it is masculine and begins with a vowel.
9. il basilico — basil
Il pesto si fa con il basilico fresco.
Pesto is made with fresh basil.
10. i funghi — mushrooms
La pizza ai funghi è la mia preferita.
Mushroom pizza is my favourite.
The singular is il fungo (masculine). Funghi is one of the -o → -i masculine plurals.
Meat, Fish, and the Second Course
The secondo is where meat and fish appear. These words come up constantly in Italian cooking and literature.
11. il pollo — chicken
Il pollo arrosto è un piatto classico.
Roast chicken is a classic dish.
12. il pesce — fish
Il venerdì mangiamo il pesce.
On Fridays we eat fish.
Pesce (masculine, ends in -e) is the general word. Specific fish have their own names.
13. la carne — meat
Non mangio la carne da anni.
I haven't eaten meat for years.
14. il prosciutto — cured ham
Il prosciutto crudo di Parma è famoso in tutto il mondo.
Parma's cured ham is famous all over the world.
Prosciutto crudo is raw-cured ham (like Parma ham). Prosciutto cotto is cooked ham. Both are common.
15. la salsiccia — sausage
La salsiccia è piccante.
The sausage is spicy.
Vegetables and the Contorno
16. le melanzane — aubergine / eggplant
La parmigiana di melanzane è un piatto del Sud.
Aubergine parmigiana is a dish from the South.
The singular is la melanzana (feminine). The plural le melanzane is more commonly encountered in recipes.
17. le zucchine — courgettes / zucchini
Le zucchine grigliate sono leggere e buone.
Grilled courgettes are light and tasty.
Both la zucchina (feminine) and lo zucchino (masculine) are correct — the Accademia della Crusca accepts both. Zucchino is the older historical form (1875) and is common in Tuscany; zucchina is common in southern and northern Italy. Learn whichever form you encounter first.
18. la patata — potato
Vorrei le patate fritte, per favore.
I'd like chips/french fries, please.
19. la cipolla — onion
Il soffritto si fa con cipolla, carota e sedano.
Soffritto is made with onion, carrot, and celery.
20. gli spinaci — spinach
La pasta agli spinaci è verde.
Spinach pasta is green.
Spinaci is masculine plural (gli spinaci). The singular lo spinacio exists but is rarely used — spinach is almost always referred to in the plural.
Cheese: A Category of Its Own
Italy has hundreds of regional cheeses. These three appear so frequently in Italian recipes and menus that every learner should know them.
21. la mozzarella — mozzarella
La pizza Margherita ha mozzarella, pomodoro e basilico.
Margherita pizza has mozzarella, tomato, and basil.
22. il parmigiano — Parmesan
Gratta un po' di parmigiano sulla pasta.
Grate a little Parmesan on the pasta.
The full name is Parmigiano Reggiano. In everyday speech it's simply il parmigiano.
23. la ricotta — ricotta
I cannoli siciliani sono ripieni di ricotta.
Sicilian cannoli are filled with ricotta.
Drinks
24. il caffè — coffee / espresso
Prendo un caffè, grazie.
I'll have a coffee, thank you.
In Italy, un caffè means an espresso by default. The accent on the final -è is part of the spelling and never drops.
25. l'acqua (f) — water
Acqua naturale o frizzante?
Still or sparkling water?
Acqua is feminine (l'acqua before a vowel). Naturale = still, frizzante = sparkling.
26. il vino — wine
Un bicchiere di vino rosso, per favore.
A glass of red wine, please.
Vino rosso = red wine, vino bianco = white wine, vino rosato = rosé.
27. la birra — beer
Hai la birra alla spina?
Do you have draught beer?
Birra is feminine (la birra). Birra alla spina is draught/tap beer.
Dessert
28. il gelato — ice cream
Che gusto di gelato vuoi?
What flavour of ice cream do you want?
Gelato is masculine (il gelato). Un gusto = one flavour. Gusti is the plural.
29. il tiramisù — tiramisù
Il tiramisù è il dolce più famoso d'Italia.
Tiramisù is Italy's most famous dessert.
Tiramisù literally means "pick me up" — from tira (picks/pulls up), mi (me), su (up). The accent on the final -ù is part of the spelling. The name likely refers to the caffeine kick from the espresso used in the recipe.
30. la torta — cake
La nonna ha preparato una torta al cioccolato.
Grandma made a chocolate cake.
Quick Reference: All 30 Words
| Italian | Gender | English |
|---|---|---|
| il pane | m | bread |
| la pasta | f | pasta |
| il riso | m | rice |
| il formaggio | m | cheese |
| l'olio | m | oil |
| il risotto | m | risotto |
| il pomodoro | m | tomato |
| l'aglio | m | garlic |
| il basilico | m | basil |
| i funghi | m pl | mushrooms |
| il pollo | m | chicken |
| il pesce | m | fish |
| la carne | f | meat |
| il prosciutto | m | cured ham |
| la salsiccia | f | sausage |
| le melanzane | f pl | aubergine / eggplant |
| le zucchine | f pl | courgettes / zucchini |
| la patata | f | potato |
| la cipolla | f | onion |
| gli spinaci | m pl | spinach |
| la mozzarella | f | mozzarella |
| il parmigiano | m | Parmesan |
| la ricotta | f | ricotta |
| il caffè | m | coffee / espresso |
| l'acqua | f | water |
| il vino | m | wine |
| la birra | f | beer |
| il gelato | m | ice cream |
| il tiramisù | m | tiramisù |
| la torta | f | cake |
A Note on Articles
You'll notice that some words use l' instead of il or la. This happens whenever a noun starts with a vowel — the article shortens to l' for both masculine and feminine nouns. For example: l'aglio (m) and l'acqua (f) both use l', but they have different genders. The gender shows up when you add an adjective: l'aglio fresco (fresh garlic — masculine) vs. l'acqua fresca (fresh water — feminine).
Words ending in -o are almost always masculine (il pollo, il vino, il pomodoro). Words ending in -a are almost always feminine (la pasta, la birra, la torta). Words ending in -e can be either — il pane and il pesce are masculine, la carne is feminine. When in doubt, learn the word with its article.
Practical Tips for Remembering These Words
- Learn the article with the word: Never memorise "pasta" alone — memorise "la pasta". This way gender becomes automatic.
- Group by meal course: If you forget a word, think about what course it belongs to. The structure of an Italian meal is a useful memory scaffold.
- Cook something: Following an Italian recipe (even in translation) puts these words in action. You'll remember words you've used.
- Read them in context: Food words appear constantly in Italian fiction and non-fiction. Encountering them in a sentence — not just a list — is what cements them.
See These Words in Real Italian Sentences
Vocabulary lists are a starting point, but words stick when you read them in context. On LingueLibrary you can read Italian stories and tap any word to see its meaning and gender instantly — so when you meet il pomodoro in a novel, you don't have to guess. Over time, the words move from the list in your head to something you simply recognise.
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