There’s a glut of glorious Italian joints in Denver right now, including Elise Wiggins’ four-month-old Cattivella. But Wiggins isn’t one to follow the crowd, so while she does a marvelous job with wood-fired fare, she’s also brought us a little slice—well, slices—of Italy that you won’t find elsewhere. The dish is called “ciccioli,” a scrumptious antipasto that’s like the love child of porky chicharrónes and crunchy potato chips. Wiggins discovered the snack in Bologna in the late 1990s when she happened upon a ciccioli street festival. “Everyone makes their ciccioli a little differently,” Wiggins says. At Cattivella, she fries sliced pork scraps left over after her team butchers Duroc hogs from McDonald Family Farm near Fort Collins. When the morsels are crisp and rendered, she seasons them with bay leaf, rosemary, ground fennel, salt, and white pepper. The resulting baconlike chips aren’t greasy and shatter just so. The ciccioli is served (as any salty, habit-forming bite should be) with a dipping sauce—in this case, spicy tomato. 10195 E. 29th Drive, Suite 110, 303-645-3779  

This article was originally published in 5280 August 2017.
Denise Mickelsen
Denise Mickelsen
Denise Mickelsen is 5280’s former food editor. She oversaw all of 5280’s food-related coverage from October 2016 to March 2021.