Ines Rosales Sweet Seville Orange Tortas
Ines Rosales Sweet Seville Orange Tortas is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Description
Description
Inés Rosales's olive oil tortas are a traditional product of Seville and are flavoured with the local Seville orange. Just like in the old days, the tortas are still made by hand, one by one, ensuring a unique texture that is light, crunchy, and flaky.
These tortas are wonderful with your morning coffee, as a snack or served as part of a dessert. They are also great with cheese or paired with pâtés.
Ines Roslaes sweet Seville orange tortas contain no additives or preservatives and are suitable for a vegan diet. The tortas come individually wrapped in packs of six.
Ingredients
Ingredients
Unbleached wheat flour, extra virgin olive oil (23%), sugar, caramelised orange [4.9%, glucose and fructose syrup, orange peel, sugar, acid (lemon juice)], sesame seeds (1.2%), yeast, sea salt and natural orange essence.
Contains: wheat, gluten, sesame.
Store in a cool dry place. Keep away from heat and light.
MADE IN SPAIN.
NUTRITION INFORMATION | ||
Servings per package: 6 | ||
Serving size: 30 g | ||
PER 100 g | PER 30 g (1 TORTA) | |
Energy | 2083 kJ / 498 kcal | 625 kJ / 149 kcal |
Protein | 6.2 g | 1.9 g |
Fat | 25 g | 7.4 g |
of which saturates | 3.2 g | 1.0 g |
Carbohydrate | 61 g | 18 g |
of which sugars | 15 g | 4.4 g |
Fibre | 3.6 g | 1.1 g |
Sodium | 0.28 g | 0.08 g |
Producer
Producer
In 1910, a woman named Ines Rosales started to make olive oil tortas (tortas de Aceite) by hand and sold them at the train station in Seville. Soon she could not keep up with the demand, so she employed the women of the local village to assist her in producing these delicate and crisp treats. She used local ingredients including extra virgin olive oil. In a short time, this Andalucian specialty became known and enjoyed throughout Spain.
Today the tradition continues. Ines Rosales Sweet Olive Oil tortas are still made by hand with the same recipe Ines Rosales created almost 100 years earlier. Women from the local village are still employed to hand-flatten and hand-wrap the tortas that are baked in small batches.