Sicilia: A Love Letter to the Food of Sicily

Sicilia: A Love Letter to the Food of Sicily

“The Arab influence is still seen today, particularly with Sicilian cuisine – almonds, saffron, oranges, pistachio and pomegranates amongst many others bear witness to their influence.”
—Excerpt from introduction to Sicilia, by Ben Tish

It’s hard to have a bad meal in Italy, it’s been said. The same is true of using this colorful cookbook celebrating Sicily’s culinary past, particularly its Arab legacies. Both the method of deep-frying and the popular ingredients of rice, sugar and oranges (which meet up in rice fritters with orange-blossom honey) are mainstays of the Sicilian diet traceable to the island’s Arab period (827-902 CE). Similarly, the whole-wheat-and-semolina sourdough bread called mafalda, often made in the shape of a crown, is likely of Arab origin. Watermelon jelly with jasmine, chocolate and pistachios—a molded, pudding-like dessert that “would have been the height of sophistication, prepared by skilled Arab chefs”—might intimidate the home cook, yet the book also features plenty of easy-to-prepare, peasant-inspired dishes that equally defined Sicily’s Arab-era diet, such as braised chickpeas and borlotti beans with kale pesto. 

Sicilia: A Love Letter to the Food of Sicily
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