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5 Things you must eat in Syracuse
Michele Giuli
5 Things you must eat in Syracuse
With its history, art and breathtaking sights, Syracuse is a wonderful choice for a trip to Italy. As for many other seaside places in Italy, this ancient city on the coast of Sicily has had cultural exchanges with the rest of the Mediterranean nations all throughout its history, thus developing unique traditions. If you’re one of our regular readers, you know what this means: a huge lot of exquisite meals. As usual, I don’t want you to go unprepared on what to taste, so here’s my list of 5 foods to eat in Syracuse.
Baked Ziti
Ziti are a tubular type of durum wheat pasta. They remind the shape of bucatini, but have a bigger diameter. If you go to a restaurant in Syracuse, ask for baked ziti. It’s a dish made of ziti, sausages, basil and scamorza, which are baked together in large quantities. They’re a perfect choice for a Sunday lunch.
In southern Italian dialects, zito and zita can mean “bachelor”, “spinster” or simply “boyfriend/girlfriend”. Ziti probably own their name to another food which brides used to cook for their wedding lunch in Naples: maccheroni alla zita.
Pur petti di tonno da zà Cicca
This typical Sicilian food has a very long name, which literally means: “Aunt Cicca’s tuna meatballs”. These meatballs are made with tuna, pecorino cheese, breadcrumbs, garlic, parsley, eggs and cloves. You should eat them in Syracuse because, in that city, tuna is traditionally cooked alla siracusana, which gives it a very special taste. This method consists of seasoning tuna with sliced onions and then frying it. When fried, the tuna is mixed with white wine and flavoured with tomato. All these ingredients and flavors make this food a real treat. Aunt Cicca was definitely a genius.
Caciocavallo and local cheeses
Syracuse and the nearby Iblei Mountains are famous for their excellent dairy products. There are lots of cheeses to taste: provole, ricottas, pecorino (but not pecorino romano)… however, among them all, caciocavallo is the one you should try first. Caciocavallo is a raw stretched hard cheese with a rounded shape and an aromatic, spicy taste. It’s made with cow’s milk and salted in brine. It was one of the first cheeses to be produced in Sicily, and now is one of the region’s most cherished delicacies.
In Syracuse and in the nearby province of Ragusa, there’s a special caciocavallo called Ragusano. Unlike other caciocavalli, the Ragusano has a brick-like shape. It’s also the only caciocavallo with a PDO status.
If you want to try good cheeses in Syracuse, you should go visit Caseificio Borderi. This family-run dairy has been producing top-quality cheeses for 90 years and has received many awards, including 4 Tripadvisor’s Certificates of Excellence.
Arancina/Arancino
You can’t visit Sicily without tasting one of its most famous food: the arancina. It’s a little ball of rice, ragù, peas and caciocavallo, which are stuffed together, breaded and then fried. It’s called arancina or arancino because it resembles an orange. In some parts of Sicily, however, it can have a conic shape.
There’s a fierce debate about the correct way to name this food. In the province of Palermo, it’s called arancina or arancine (plural). In the province of Catania, people call it arancino or arancini. The difference lies in a single vowel, but that vowel marks a geographic distinction better than road signs. In Syracuse, people use both names, so you can ask for it without being afraid of making a mistake.
Caponata modicana
The caponata is one of Sicily’s most famous traditional foods. It’s a vegetarian dish made with aubergines, tomatoes, raisins, capers and pine nuts. Its name could be derived from the only ingredient which is not part of its recipe anymore: dolphinfish (“caponi” in some Sicilian dialects). Long ago, in noble families, caponata was served with dolphinfish. Common people were too poor to afford dolphinfish, so they exchanged it with aubergines, which became part of the traditional recipe for caponata. If you are in Syracuse and want to eat a good caponata, you can find it at Fratelli Burgio. Their caponata has been awarded as the best preserve in Italy.
Now you’re ready to go and appreciate all the foods you can eat in Syracuse. Let me know which one is your favorite in the comments!
Hi Jean. The easiest way to get to Siracusa is flying to the International Airport of Catania, which is about 45 minutes by car away. About the accommodation, I can’t give much advice, but you can find a lot of solutions on OTAs like Booking.
Italian food blogger forged in the heat of his aunt's Sunday lunches. He lives in a small town in Central Italy and spends his days cooking and writing.
2 thoughts on “5 Things you must eat in Syracuse”
I so want to spend a month there. How would I get there where would I fly into? Also, how can I find a room for one for a stay of a month. Thank you.
Hi Jean. The easiest way to get to Siracusa is flying to the International Airport of Catania, which is about 45 minutes by car away. About the accommodation, I can’t give much advice, but you can find a lot of solutions on OTAs like Booking.