Pizza Hut’s new pasta range is approved by Italians. Kind of.
Pizza Hut Middle East pushed Italian pride, tradition, and passports to the limit with new pasta range.
Pizza Hut has just launched pasta. Yes, the same Pizza Hut that Italy frowns upon has now taken on another Italian classic. The kind that’s creamy, cheesy, loaded with sauce, and blatantly breaks every Italian rule in the book.
So, before unveiling their new pasta, they dared to challenge an entire nation, defy centuries of tradition, and actually get approval for it. By Italians. Kind of.
But the brand knew what they were getting into. Traditional Italians would never agree to this culinary crime. Not the Giuseppes, not the Francescas, and definitely not their Nonnas. So, Pizza Hut did what they do best, they got creative. They turned to other Italians. Those who’ve been born and raised in countries like Kazakhstan, Lebanon, Japan and so on – who hold the Italian passport, but not the purist mindset.
It was the perfect setup for a social experiment disguised as a taste test, designed to test the limits of tradition.
The result is an experiment that features two very different groups:
Traditional Italians who guard their cuisine like it’s sacred, and the non-traditional Italians who are open to bending the rules.
Both were served Pizza Hut’s gloriously un-Italian pasta. And their reactions were caught on film. The result? Some delight, some raised eyebrows, and loads of debate.
The experiment didn’t just test a recipe; it tested Italian identity. Created by Publicis Middle East, the campaign exposes the irony of a brand that doesn’t even exist in Italy gets approval of “legitimate” Italians. They broke rules, tradition, and Italian pride.

Dining and Cooking