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I was inspired by a museum in Palazzuolo Acreide about the Grand Tour; in the 17th through 19th centuries, young, upper-class Europeans, would travel for months in search of art, culture, and the roots of Western civilization, mingling with nobles. Only the most adventurous made it to Sicily. Times have changed but travel still isn't easy, and Sicily is huge, with way too much to see and eat, and plenty of old nobility and new entrepreneurs with interesting stories. My Sicilian journeys focus on culinary and enological traditions but there's always time between meals for archeological sites and museums. So I'm writing a six-part series, my very own Grand Tour of Sicily.
Photo by Faith Willinger
The city's markets are exciting, with hawkers screaming in Sicilian. Purple cauliflower looks extraterrestrial. Just-picked olives (to be preserved) are the size of small plums. The seafood is shiny and vibrant--a vendor slaps an octopus for me and it changes color and moves. That's fresh! Swordfish with sword, tiny red mullet, shrimp with heads and antennae intact. Nearby, there's Antica Marina, my favorite restaurant in the city, well served by the fish market outside its front door. Say hi to Salvo. Ask for fish that speaks Sicilian.
Photo by Faith Willinger
My friends at Savia recommended a nearby trattoria, Don Turiddu 2, which is family-run, with fresh fish and simple cooking. They didn't steer me wrong. (Via G.De Felice 18, closed Mondays)
I read about a Catania tradition, crispelle, made only in the evening at fry shops. After asking around, I headed for La Casa delle Crispelle, supposedly the best in town, and purchased a few--fried dough with ricotta or anchovy in the middle. Not really worth the calories. I balked at the dessert versions made with rice--one too phallic to even consider. (Via Plebiscito 478/480)
Next stops on the Grand Tour: Sortino and Palazzuolo Acreide, with monothematic museums, an archeological site, an unknown form of pizza, cool restaurants, B&B, and cannoli-mania...
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2009/11/grand-tour-redux-eating-in-sicily/29968/
