
This is the last post from our trip to Sicily, July, 2007.

Sardines in many forms are the signature dish of Sicilian cooking -- and can't be duplicted outside of Sicily. I especially liked these sardine balls: ground fish balls in tomato sauce.


Swordfish, snapper, and many other fish both large and small appeared on the hotel buffet, but I was always too immersed in enjoying my meal to photograph them. These photos all are from the restaurants in Palermo.
In 1686, Francesco Procopio de Coltelli of Palermo, Sicily, founded Le Procope, now the longest-lived cafe/restaurant in Paris. This is considered evidence that the Sicilians, especially the Palermitans, were recognized at that time as experts in sweets, coffee, and gelato. Coffee was just beginning its reign throughout Europe: it had recently come from the East, via the Arabs who were in contact with Ethiopia where the coffee plant had its origin. Now delicious, very strong small cups of espresso are one of the pleasures of visiting the island.
The book Bitter Almonds: Recollections and recipes from a Sicilian girlhood, by Mary Taylor Simeti and Maria Grammatico documents the old ways with almond paste made by nuns. The hardships and mistreatment suffered by Maria Grammatico while she lived and learned in the convent make it a very modern story. The ancient tradition of pastry-making and other ways that nuns were exploited make it an old story as well. While Palermitans ate and made such confections, this book documents the shop in Erice where I have been on other trips.

First we ate in several restaurants in Palermo, where we tried classics such as fruitti del mare and salad capresi.
At the beach resort, the antepasto was served on a big buffet, and included both hot and cold choices. Each day there were at least three cold dishes including many raw and cooked vegetables, peppers, shellfish, and numerous combinations. I didn't get to try anywhere near every dish -- I'm afraid I missed most of the hot stuffed vegetables as I loved the cold salads too much.
One day, I arranged the long-stemmed artichoke hearts, two types of tomatoes with two types of mozzerella, and so on on my plate for a photo. I also loved the tomato-greenbean-tuna combinations. The olive oil was especially delicious.


"As it is, Food and Drug Administration records show that China isn't even the leading source of contaminated imports to the United States. India and Mexico have exceeded China in "refused food shipments" over the past year, and the leader in rejected candy imports was a country with an otherwise antiseptic image: Denmark. Domestic food sources also aren't exempt from scandal: Remember the California spinach scare last year? And last month, another California-based company recalled more than 75,000 pounds of hamburger distributed in the western United States, the latest in a lengthy series of tainted-meat incidents -- all from American suppliers."
"I suggest that customers refuse to sit at a table or look at a menu. We should sit at the bar and ask the chef questions about everything — what he wants to make us and how we should eat it. We should agree to turn our backs on our American addictions to tuna (for starters, try mackerel), globs of fake wasabi (let the chef add the appropriate amount), gallons of soy sauce (let the chef season the sushi if it needs seasoning) and chopsticks (use your fingers so the chef can pack the sushi loosely, as he would in Japan). Diners will be amazed at how following these simple rules can make a sushi chef your friend, and take you on new adventures in taste.
"In return, the chefs, be they Japanese or not, must honor the sushi tradition and make the effort to educate us — no more stoicism. They must also be willing to have a candid conversation about the budget before the meal; it’s the only way American diners will be willing to surrender to the chef’s suggestions. Sushi should never be cheap, but it also should never be exorbitant, because that makes it impossible to create a clientele of regulars.
"Fraternizing with the chef may be a tough habit for Americans to take up. But we’ve had sushi here now for four decades, and it’s time for a change — both for our sake, and for the sake of the embattled tuna. Let the conversation across the sushi bar begin."
At the Ann Arbor Farmers' Market local food has always been a superb summer possibility with a large variety of Michigan fruit and vegetables. A variety of cut flowers and garden plants are well-adapted to conditions here, as well as adding beauty and color to the market.
"The only thing New Yorkers ignore more than nature is history." From Mark Kurlansky's preface to The Big Oyster: History on the Half Shell.




After reading The Zen of Fish for three days, I decided to eat some sushi! We went to Totero, a sushi bar near campus (named for the Miazaki movie). Len ordered the deluxe platter. I ordered a simple cucumber roll, a seaweed salad, and two individual pieces of sushi, later followed by a spider roll. The book described how custom-made sushi and rolls contain rice that's still warm: that was the case with my delicious toro and salmon roe sushi. It was fun knowing the history of these two types of sushi.