A jar that arrives before you taste it
Rosso di Calabria doesn’t introduce itself politely. It arrives the way Calabria arrives: sun on the shoulders, salt in the air, and a heat that feels less like “spicy” and more like character. You don’t need a map to understand it. You just need a spoon.
There’s a particular kind of red that belongs to the South of Italy—deeper than tomato, brighter than brick, almost alive. The red of sauce simmering with the window open. The red of pepper crushed between fingers. The red of a land that learned to speak through food, because food is what stays when everything else changes.
A return, not a concept
Behind the name is Cosimo Pasqua, and the story reads like a return rather than a launch. After years around food, he chose the harder path: building a line that doesn’t hide behind tricks, but stands on raw materials, craft, and restraint—the kind of restraint you only have when you trust what you start with.
Rosso di Calabria builds its world around two anchors that Calabria understands instinctively: cherry tomatoes and chili pepper. Not as a theme, but as a language. Tomato for brightness and comfort. Chili for edge and memory.



Tomato as a foundation, chili as a signature
Start with the tomato and you understand the brand’s tone. Gino, Passata di Pomodoro tastes like a cherry tomato that still remembers the field—clean, vivid, almost cheerful.
It’s the kind of passata you can build your week on: quick pasta sauces that don’t need a long ingredient list, pizza bases that stay light, stews that become warmer without getting louder.
Then comes the other half of Calabria—the one that doesn’t soften itself for anyone. Ruote di Fuoco is heat with a backbone: aromatic, decisive, and made to lift simple dishes into something you notice. A spoonful changes the mood of a plate—grilled vegetables become addictive, sandwiches stop being forgettable, seafood gets a flash of Southern confidence.
And if there’s a product that feels like a handshake from the region, it’s Bomba Saporita: bold, generous, immediately understood—the jar you keep “for later” and then finish too quickly because it makes ordinary food taste like it had a plan all along.
Calabria, in the rhythm of real life
Some days you don’t want a plan. You want a shortcut that still feels real. That’s where Spaghettata Calabrisella earns its place: a fast way to bring Calabria to the table with nothing more than good olive oil and pasta. Simple, but not basic—the kind of pantry staple that makes the room smell like something is happening.
And that’s the thread running through everything Rosso di Calabria does: honesty.
These are products made to be used, not admired—confident enough to stay clear, and generous enough to become habits. If you’re curating a shelf (or a menu) where every item must justify its space, this is the kind of brand that makes the decision feel natural: one passata that can carry a category, one chili specialty that becomes a house touch, one bold jar customers remember—and ask for again.














