A Taste of Sicily: My Guide to Authentic Sicilian Food Experiences
The Voyage Co.
When you come to Sicily, the food is not just what you eat, it is what makes you understand the island. I have spent years exploring the most special places, tasting the real Sicilian food. Let me take you to them.
Federica is curious about food and quality raw ingredients, and loves travelling around the world. Her recommendations are rooted in long, slow days following Sicilian flavour wherever it leads.
1. Arancino from Da Savia, Catania
Catania
Da Savia is the most traditional arancino place in Catania. This is not a restaurant — it's a small shop where you order and eat standing or take with you. The arancino is the most classic Sicilian street food: a rice ball filled with ragù, peas, cheese, fried until golden. They have many flavours, but the original is always the best.
People come here every day because it is authentic and it is delicious. When you eat this arancino, you are eating what Sicilians eat for breakfast or lunch.
2. Granita and Brioche, Caffè Sicilia
Noto
In Noto, famous for almond production, Caffè Sicilia makes granita to the most ancient recipe. This is a tradition: Sicilian breakfast is granita and brioche. The almond granita is creamy and smooth, made the traditional way from real almonds. It is the most special granita you will taste.
The brioche is soft and fresh, perfect for dunking in the cold granita. This combination is simple but perfect. When you taste it in Noto, in this town that is so beautiful, you understand something about how Sicilians start their day.
3. Sicilian Chocolate
Modica
Sicilian chocolate comes from Spanish tradition, from centuries ago when Spain ruled Sicily. The chocolate is different from other Italian chocolate — more rough, more intense. In Modica, Bonajuto is the most traditional place making chocolate the old way. They use organic ingredients and the production is very special.
The taste is strong and complex, not sweet like modern chocolate. When you eat Sicilian chocolate, you taste history and passion.
4. Fresh Fish at Burgio Market, Siracusa
Siracusa
In Siracusa, inside the folkloric fish market, you will find Burgio. This is where you experience the raw beauty of Sicilian fishing tradition. The fish is fresh that morning, sold by people who know every variety. You can eat here like tapas — small portions of many things — or buy to cook yourself.
The atmosphere is chaotic and alive, full of people who buy fish for dinner. This is Sicily eating fish as it always has.
Sicily is a long lunch and a short night, taken slowly enough that you taste it. Eat these four things in their hometowns and the island will start to make sense in a way no monument or guidebook can deliver.