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** NEW: Christmas Eve in Italy: Celebrating the Feast of Seven Fishes, Sicilian Style (Free Italy Travel Advice) **



On December 24, style="font-style: italic;">la vigilia di Natale,

Giuseppe

Scarlata's family

will sit down to a feast dominated

by seafood. In their style="font-style: italic;">Trapani

home on Sicily's west coast, they typically start with an

array of antipasti,

among them marinated octopus and squid salad, smoked swordfish and thin

slices of cured tuna called style="font-style: italic;">bresaola di tonno.

And, as Giuseppe points out, that's just the beginning.


“What you eat depends on the family,” says style="font-style: italic;">Fiorangela Piccione,

who lives in style="font-style: italic;">Siracusa. 

She often prepares a style="font-style: italic;">fritto misto

of lightly battered and fried fish and vegetables such as artichokes,

fennel and potatoes. Pasta might be dressed with a sauce of clams,

cuttlefish with their ink, or mussels, while eel is simmered with

tomatoes and capers. Also likely to be on the menu is a wonderful

baccalà (dried cod) and potato stew ( href="http://www.dreamofitaly.com/public/736.cfm">see

recipe), which Fiora taught me

to make when I was researching my book href="http://www.tonilydecker.com" target="_blank"> style="font-style: italic;">Seafood alla Siciliana:

Recipes and Stories from a Living Tradition

(Lake Isle Press).


In Katia

Amore's part of href="http://www.dreamofitaly.com/public/department61.cfm">Sicily,

near Modica,

everyone eats what's known as style="font-style: italic;">pastizzu

or ‘mpatata in dialect—a pie with a fish and

vegetable filling (shark and zucchini, for example) topped with a

pastry or a bread-like crust. During href="http://www.dreamofitaly.com/public/732.cfm">the

holidays in Sicily, cooks often

carry these concoctions to the house of a friend or relative for the

Sicilian equivalent of a potluck.


These intimate family celebrations have their roots in a liturgical

calendar that, from the 4th century on, distinguished between days when

meat could be eaten and magro or “lean” days when

only fish was permitted. December 24 was a fast day, broken only in the

final hours of waiting for the birth of the Christ child by a

multi-course seafood feast.


Just as the particular dishes can vary from one region or family to

another, so can the number. The idea of serving seven fish dishes or

varieties of seafood is often linked to the number of sacraments or the

days God required to create the world. But the numbers three (Trinity),

twelve (apostles) and thirteen (apostles plus Christ) are considered

equally propitious. And the truth is that many Italian families

don't bother to count—the important thing is

gathering in the dead of winter for a celebratory feast.


The custom of an all-fish Christmas Eve dinner is particularly

meaningful to the many Italian-Americans who emigrated from southern

Italy. Growing up in New York in the ‘40s, my friend Kathy

Manfredi Mackie remembers the sense of anticipation as her

Sicilian-American mom and aunts worked for days on the preparations and

her Calabrian dad shopped for fish on Arthur Avenue or Sullivan Street.


The meal kicked off with a roasted red pepper and anchovy antipasto

and, on another platter, style="font-style: italic;">caponata

circled like a wreath around a savory heap of canned tuna. style="font-style: italic;">Scungilli

(large marine snails) were in the picture, as were angel hair pasta

with shellfish, squid or tiny shrimp. The main course might be,

lobsters, prawns or baccalà. “We ate late and,

just before we started, someone blew out the candles on the

tree,” remembers Kathy.


Her family still holds to the Feast of Seven Fishes tradition, but when

her large four-generation family gathers around the table these days,

the meal is simpler. The main course is cioppino, a spicy soup Kathy

and her daughters Shevaun and Kelly make with seven kinds of fish,

shellfish, and crustaceans.  


 Even in Sicily, fish sometimes mingles with meat on Christmas

Eve and, in central or northern Italy, may be absent altogether. Sara

Matthews-Grieco, who rents href="http://www.poggiolotuscany.com" target="_blank">country

apartments in Valdarno, emailed

me to say: “The Feast of Seven Fishes is more or less

respected in href="http://www.dreamofitaly.com/public/department55.cfm"

target="_blank">Tuscany,

but for New Year's Eve, which is considered a

vigilia—waiting for the New Year—it's

then that you have an endless series of fish dishes. You have to stay

up eating until midnight so that you can have spumante and panettone

and, above all, grapes (symbolically money) as the New Year comes

in.”


If there's a conclusion to draw here, it's the

freedom to take what you please from the patchwork of Italian

traditions to create your own fish-centric holiday celebrations.

Usually I serve one or two fish dishes on Christmas Eve, but this year

I'm going for the full seven, all from the pages of style="font-style: italic;">Seafood alla Siciliana.

No need to finalize the menu quite yet, but I know octopus simmered in

Nero d'Avola wine ( href="http://www.dreamofitaly.com/public/736.cfm">see

recipe) will, along with

pistachio-crusted shrimp, linguine with a garlicky clam sauce, seared

tuna with sweet-sour onions, and a stunning

salad of shredded baccala

with blood oranges and pomegranate seeds.


And for New Year's Eve? Just one great dish, most likely the

luxurious lobster soup with broken fettuccine I learned to make from

Palermo chef style="font-style: italic;">Patrizia di Benedetto.

I'll also make sure to

welcome 2010, in true Tuscan style, by laying in a supply of Prosecco,

href="http://www.dreamofitaly.com/public/651.cfm"> style="font-style: italic;">panettone

and grapes.


-

Toni Lydecker style="font-style: italic;">


Toni

Lydecker sampled at least 70 kinds of seafood while

working on Seafood alla

Siciliana

and found all of it delicious except cuttlefish ink and

lattume

(tuna sperm sac). Her book takes readers on a Sicilian odyssey as she

explores the island's fish markets, watches fishermen mend

nets, and learns in the kitchens of home cooks and chefs. For more,

visit target="_blank"> style="font-style: italic;">www.tonilydecker.com

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