Strozzapreti aka "priest stranglers," are long strands of pasta, like twisted tagliatelle, usually made with wine instead of water. One famous dish from Emilia uses a pasta called gramigna ("little weeds", which look like wiggly or curly cords) with wine-braised sausage (
gramigna alla salsiccia e vino). But once we cross the border into Romagna, the gramigna are replaced with strozzapreti. Another dish from Romagna,
strozzapreti con poveracce e le seppie (strozzapreti with clams and squid) also features this evocatively-named pasta. (This, all courtesy of Lynn Rossetto Kasper's
Splendid Table)
The name, at least in
one explanation, "goes back to the tradition of the women from Romagna preparing this type of pasta for the local priest, while the husbands, evidently a little bit more anticlerical, wished the priest would choke while he was stuffing himself with it." The linked site (you'll need to type "strozzapreti" into the search function since the complete link doesn't seem to work here) goes into far more detail, should you be interested.
The always-infallible
Wikipedia, offers "that gluttonous priests were so enthralled by the savory pasta that they ate too quickly and choked themselves, sometimes to death. Another explanation involves the azdora [the housewife in Romagna], who ‘chokes’ the dough strips to make the strozzapreti: "... in that particular moment you would presume that the azdora would express such a rage (perhaps triggered by the misery and difficulties of her life) to be able to strangle a priest!"
P.S. Fra Antonio: were it not for extraordinary resources (and the lucky fact that I happened to remember this particular item from reading the cookbook), you would leave us bereft. Our linguistic abilities are poor indeed compared to yours. Have mercy!
Gypsy Boy
"I am not a glutton--I am an explorer of food." (Erma Bombeck)