As Lucio Quaglia walks past the old grinding stone from 1913 in Molino Quaglia’s flour training and application center and makes his way up to the modern pizza training rooms, it feels as though he is traveling through 100 years of company history.
“Our grandfather founded Molino Quaglia in 1914. There was no electricity, so the grinding stones were placed on rafts and powered by the Adige river,” says Quaglia. His grandfather, Angelo Quaglia, moved the operation to Vighizzolo d’Este in 1937, 40 kilometers south of Padova. “My father Annito then modernized the mill and turned it into an industrial-scale operation from 1947 onward. My brother, my sister, and I had the privilege of growing up with the mill,” he recalls.
Fast forward to 2024, and the mill still stands in Vighizzolo d’Este, catering to the same bakeries, restaurants, and private households as the Quaglias have for generations. Their most famous brand is called “Petra”, and just like countless Italian food traditions that conquered the world from small villages, Petra is sold globally.