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Restaurant Guide to Sicily: Modica

This small city is a jewel of Baroque architecture and is gastronomically important because it maintains the ancient Aztec traditions of chocolate manufacture, learned from the Spanish occupation of southern Italy and Sicily from the early 1500s, when Spain was discovering the New World. You’ll find Modica chocolate sold in the regional food shops of the Autogrills on the autostradas, as well as in fine food shops all over Italy. The best brand is Bonajuto with a shop in the center of town. Modica is well worth a day trip from Catania or Siracusa.

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La Sirenetta
Ristorante Pizzeria Bar
Sorda Sampieri, 79
Tel. 0932-454904

The pizza is quite good, but the other food was not wonderful, although the fish I ordered was very fresh. I am not recommending this place to tourists. I was taken by friends whose country house is nearby, and they wanted me to see the local scene, which was, indeed, enlightening. So, on the other hand, if you are in Modica, in want of pizza, and are curious about the normal life of modern Modica, this restaurant fits the bill. Proving how small the world is now, it could easily have been an Italian-American family restaurant on Long Island. It is a slick and contemporary place frequented by, on a Saturday night, couples on dates, middle-aged couples dining in large packs, and families with misbehaving children.
     
     

Scaccia de Spadara

 

L'Arte della Focaccia da Spadaro
Via Risorgimento, 113
Tel. 0932-453519
Closed on Tuesdays

This is a bakery, not a restaurant, in the modern section of Modica, not the Baroque historic center. We stopped here to buy scaccia, the local savory pastry, to take home with us. It is to die for. I thought so when I ate it, my first experience with this pastry. And I thought so after a week of eating it at other places, from other bakeries.

     
     
   

Osteria dei Sapori Perduti
Corso Umberto 1, 228-230
Tel. 0932-944247
E-mail: info@osteriadeisaporiperduti.it
www.osteriadeisaporiperduti.it

In the kitchen is a young woman, a self-taught chef. In the dining room is her charming husband. They couldn’t be nicer or more adorable. The rooms – there are several – are decorated with antique farm and kitchen equipment, which should prepare you for the food, which follows the old ways of Modica. You will definitely feel the need to order one of the dishes that come in tall terracotta pots, just to have one of these vessels on your table. But don’t order pasta in broth in the pot. It tastes mainly of salt. We ate very good ricotta ravioli with sugo di maiale, pork-based ragu, and some other heavy-ish dishes, but this is, indeed, the old-time food of Modica. One dish, lolli, is a chewy pasta made in thick ropes and served with brown fava beans. Apparently, it is a very hard dish to find these days, unless your grandmother makes it. It is definitely one of those things that you would have to have grown up eating to enjoy, as many people in the dining room seemed to be doing. For me it was more a gastro-anthropological experience than something delicious. Still, I’d come back here to delve more into this recherché repertoire. Truthfully, I can’t wait. And you won’t spend more than $35 a person, all told.

     
     
Sicily Guide: Palermo - Sferracavallo - Catania - Taormina - Modica - Siracusa
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