Many factors distinguish Sicily. Obvious, perhaps, but impossible to overestimate are the cumulative effects of it being an island set two miles from the Italian mainland and less than 100 miles from Africa, continuously occupied and repeatedly conquered for over 20,000 years. In historic times, Sicans, Sicels, Elymians, Phoenicians, Greeks, Rome, Carthage, Vandals, Jews, Saracens, Normans, Byzantium, and Spain have all left their marks on the people and cuisine. The Sicilian dialect draws many words from Greek and Arabic and is not intelligible for native Italian speakers.
Today the island has distinct cuisines on the eastern (Magna Graecia) and western (Moorish) sides. While the coast features seafood in abundance, the preparations are different from side to side. In the West, fish mixed with sultanas, mountain fennel, pine nuts, sweet onions are common (the great
U Perciatu' cu li sarde), as are
panelle, chickpea fritters, and Maccu', a soup made of chick peas. You'll find anchovies, mint, citrus, saffron, chocolate, almonds, hot peppers, indigenous greens, all used in novel combinations that evoke the food of the middle east, but with a clearly Sicilian signature. The sweets of Palermo are simply outstanding: cannoli, cassata,
frutta di Martorana (elaborately scupted fruit made of marzipan), and gelati unlike anything found on the mainland. And the produce is like nowhere else: figs,
nespole, fichi d'india.
On the east side, the Greek influence is more prominent. A fennel salad with bottarga and blood oranges and swordfish with
salmoriglio (olive oil, lemon, herbs, salt) would be a typical meal. One simply cannot over praise the capers from Pantelleria.
You can get decent
panelle at il Cortile (8445 W. Lawrence), but I have yet to find a satisfactory
pasta cu li sarde anywhere in town. Bridgeport used to have many Sicilian families, but I am not much in touch with the neighborhood today. My favorite pastries are from Palermo Bakery (3317 N. Harlem), but Sicilian Bakery at 4632 N Cumberland (next door to il Cortile) is good, too.
I am a devoted son of Naples and so maintain obeisance to the Partenopean Siren, but my second love in Italian food will always be Sicilian.
Ma, chi sacciu.
Last edited by
Choey on September 27th, 2005, 5:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.