An Entrée To Community and Culture In Sicily

You don’t have to be a fancy cook to enjoy participating in a hands-on cooking class during one of our small-group tours. So much of the experience is working together and learning about Sicilian culture and family culture. Here, our group was making Sarde Beccafico, fresh sardines stuffed with breadcrumbs seasoned with olive oil, raisins, pine nuts, fresh parsley, seasalt and pepper that are then breaded and fried. You’ll learn that the recipe first was made not with sardines, but with the coveted Beccafico bird. Cucina Povera style cooks (popular cooks) who couldn’t get the expensive bird, changed up the recipe to use sardines, placing the fin of the fish like a wing upon plating, for a clever switch. Cool, huh!? See what I mean about food being an entrée to culture? Join me for our Experience Sicily tours in 2020, and your heart and stomach will be full with joy!

Let’s talk about which one you will love! Write to me at AllisonScola@ExperienceSicily.com.

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About the author

Allison Scola is founder, owner, and curator of Experience Sicily and the Cannoli Crawl. Named one of the experts for the 2019 New York Times Travel Show, Scola writes and lectures on Sicily and leads immersive tours and designs custom itineraries that delight discerning travelers. She has been featured on Rudy Maxa’s World with the Carey’s, America’s #1 Travel Radio Show and as the cannoli expert in the documentary Cannoli, Traditions Around the Table. Scola has lectured about Sicily at University of Pennsylvania, The New School, LIU Post University, Queens College, Westchester Italian Cultural Center, at high schools in the New York City metropolitan area, and at events in New York City.

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