
Siena Food Souvenirs: What to Actually Bring Home (2026)
Panforte, ricciarelli, cantucci, pecorino, olive oil. What to buy, where to buy it, and what to skip at the tourist shops.
# Siena Food Souvenirs: What to Actually Bring Home
Tourist shops around Piazza del Campo sell "Tuscan" olive oil that's bottled in Puglia and panforte made in Milan. Here's what locals actually buy — and where.
The real Sienese souvenirs
Panforte A dense, spiced fruit-and-nut cake dating back to the 13th century. The original "panforte nero" is dark, peppery, and intense. The "panforte bianco" (white) is milder, with a vanilla-sugar crust.
What to buy: Nannini or Pasticceria Bini in the centro. Look for the "IGP" mark — it guarantees Siena origin. Avoid the cellophane-wrapped discs in souvenir shops.
Price: €12–18 for a 500g cake.
Ricciarelli Soft almond cookies, diamond-shaped, dusted with powdered sugar. They're the signature sweet of Siena — lighter than amaretti, melt-in-your-mouth texture.
What to buy: Fresh from Pasticceria Nannini (Via Banchi di Sopra) or Pasticceria Bini. They stay good for 2–3 weeks in the box.
Price: €8–12 for a 250g box.
Cantucci Hard, twice-baked almond biscotti from the wider Tuscan region (not strictly Sienese, but everywhere here). The classic pairing is with vin santo — dip, don't soak.
What to buy: Any good alimentari (grocery store) with a bakery section. The Antica Drogheria Manganelli near the Campo has excellent house-made ones.
Price: €6–10 for a bag.
Pecorino di Pienza Aged sheep's milk cheese from Pienza, 45 minutes from Siena. The "stagionato" (aged 6+ months) is nutty and firm; the "fresco" (fresh) is soft and mild.
What to buy: La Cucina di Giuditta ( Via di Città) or the Saturday market at Piazza del Mercato. Ask to taste before buying.
Price: €18–28/kg depending on age.
Chianti Classico / Brunello You don't need to visit a winery to buy good wine. The Enoteca Italiana inside the Fortezza Medicea has a curated selection of regional bottles at fair prices — and they ship.
What to buy: A Chianti Classico DOCG (€12–18) or a Rosso di Montalcino (€15–22) for drinking now. Brunello di Montalcino (€35–60) for special occasions.
Price: €12–60 depending on bottle.
Sienese saffron Pienza and the Val d'Orcia produce small quantities of high-quality saffron. It's expensive but genuine — look for the red threads, not powder.
Price: €8–12 for 0.5g.
What to skip
- "Tuscan" truffle oil in tourist shops — it's almost always synthetic aroma, not real truffles.
- Pre-packaged "cantucci" in multi-language boxes near the Duomo — industrial biscuits, not baked locally.
- "Chianti" with a generic label and no DOCG mark — could be bulk wine from anywhere in Italy.
- Ceramic "Siena" plates — pretty, but they're made in Deruta (Umbria) or China, not Siena.
Where locals shop
| Shop | Address | Best for | |---|---|---| | Pasticceria Nannini | Via Banchi di Sopra 24 | Panforte, ricciarelli, fresh pastries | | Pasticceria Bini | Via di Città 73 | Traditional panforte, almond sweets | | La Cucina di Giuditta | Via di Città 75 | Pecorino, cured meats, olive oil | | Enoteca Italiana | Fortezza Medicea | Wine, shipping service | | Mercato di Piazza del Mercato | Saturdays | Fresh pecorino, local produce |
Practical tips
- Pecorino and fresh meats cannot be brought into the US, Australia, or Japan. Check your country's import rules before buying.
- Wine can usually be checked in luggage (wrapped in clothes) or shipped by the enoteca.
- Panforte and ricciarelli travel well and are allowed into most countries.
Related guides
Final word
The best souvenir from Siena isn't something you buy — it's the memory of eating a ricciarelli with a morning cappuccino. But if you must bring something home, make it edible. Write us at redazione@visitsienaguide.it if you need shipping advice.
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