The following was re-printed from the October 2003 issue of International
Travel News.
The Secrets of Sicily
The old country proves to be a place of many passions.
By Alba Orsi and Paulette Hurdlik
I never dreamed that one of my most vivid images of Sicily — a
place whose food, culture, architecture and scenery had whetted
my travel lust for years — would be a broom, and a gnarled
broom at that.
On the way to our hotel in Taormina, an exotic village
etched into the cliffs overlooking the Mediterranean Sea,
we’d negotiated a series of hairpin turns. Embankments rose
above us, dripping
with
bougainvillea
in bright pinks and reds and gnarled century-old cacti.
Inescapably
looming over Taormina was an unusually
active Mount Etna, belching smoke by day and spewing fiery
lava flows visible for miles by night.
Every
night, the volcano deposited a thin layer of black ash on
all of Taormina. Every morning shopkeepers and homeowners
turned out, patiently sweeping, sweeping, the fine ash with
impossibly gnarled straw brooms held together with wood and
twine. The brooms, their design as old as Sicily itself, required
multiple passes, but finally, they did help sweep clean the
small passages throughout the village.
Only once in Taormina did I see a youngster tending to the
ash with what seemed to me a far more reasonable tool —
a portable vacuum cleaner (in a trendy Swatch store).
A shop with its corporate roots in Milan seems not the kind
of place that honors the merits of the broom — or the
traditions — handed down from the grandparents. Its
staff isn’t likely to appreciate the meditative power
and spiritual rejuvenation rooted in the loving, careful repetition
of familiar tasks — harvesting olives, pruning the family
orange grove, mending a fishing net, meticulously painting
a cart (that takes a full year to complete), finding the freshest
fish at the best price every day for the evening’s meal,
or carrying out a chef’s complex and operatic daily
negotiation with the vegetable farmer.
But for a couple of stressed urban Americans, the Sicilian
approach to life offers a little bit of paradise.
Let’s start with food. Growing it, selling it, preparing
it, and anticipating that next meal punctuates Sicilian daily
life like no other culture I’ve seen — with the
possible exception of New Orleans, of course. And New Orleans
has a disproportionately large Sicilian community.
Fresh rules. For example, bread served at lunch is considered
-unacceptable by dinner, leading to the prepondrance of bread
crumbs in Sicilian cooking. A loaf of bread, six hours old,
is simply left to dry, then grated and the crumbs sauteed
with onion, garlic and olive oil and used in the the preparation
of many traditional dishes.
Our
hosts Giovanni and Marcella explain that as working professionals,
they are unfortunately unable to shop twice a day for bread.
Their situation is somewhat mollified because the bread delivery
man comes faithfully to their home, everyday except Sunday,
punctually at 10 am.
We were lucky to visit during the olive harvest. As we drive
from Cefalu to Bagheria, we notice a thin black mesh net underneath
each olive tree. We hear the sounds of conversation and laughter,
punctuated by whacking noises. Wooden ladders lean against
trees; husbands and wives pick what they can reach from the
ladders and beat the rest of the olives down by hitting the
branches with canes.
Olive oil, the soul of Sicilian cooking, is a far cry from
the pale, insipid stuff that is exported to the States. All
it takes to confirm its quality is one bite of freshly baked
Sicilian bread, still hot from an oven that has been fired
with lemon branches, when it’s sprinkled with oil and
salt.
My friend and guide Marcella, who attended the University
of Wisconsin with me, puts it like this, "I’m not
so sure that at this stage of my life I could live in a place
where things that are important to me are not emphasized —
like olive oil."
We discover that it’s not enough to know the trees
your olive oil comes from; you must also know where and how
it has been pressed. Each family and each restaurant has a
favored olive press they have patronized for generations.
They purchase a year’s supply of oil during the November
harvest. And if they don’t use it all, most people throw
it out when the next harvest rolls around. Fresh rules.
After Taormina, we set out for Siracusa on Sicily’s
Eastern coast. Siracusa is the summation of Sicilian splendor,
the city that gave the world architectural beauty with a baroque
heart. Its spirit is mostly clearly felt in the narrow lanes
of Ortygia island, approachable by only one bridge.
We know we are near the market on Ortygia when we hear the
operatic locutions of the fish monger. The array of goods
is dizzying, ranging from the day’s fresh fish and produce
(including special apples only grown in the volcanic soil
of Mount Etna) to fresh sun-dried tomatoes, lovingly displayed
and individually arranged by the farmer himself, an incorrigible
flirt, who charms us into a purchase.
The market is bustling with grandparents (most living with
their working adult children) who come to practice their daily
art and ritual — only the freshest! the best! and at
the right price! — as they choose the family’s
food.
The smallest question results in extended gesticulations
and lengthy prognostication on the merits and price of each
loaf of bread, lemon, pear, fish, olive and tomato. Of course,
there’s a healthy serving of gossip and socializing
thrown in for good measure.
And forget Euros. Four years after the currency conversion,
everyone here still seems to shop and bargain in lire.
Sicilians are both the most Italian of Italians, as Luigi
Barzini writes, and the least. They are heir to a complex,
fascinating heritage with remnants of ancient Greeks, Carthaginians,
Arabs and Normans clearly visible in the area’s many
monuments.
The
city’s cathedral in the center of Siracusa is the perfect
place to begin to understand this cultural pastiche. Its elaborate
baroque exterior belies the 6th-century BC Temple of Minerva
which was the foundation for the church, and whose massive
columns are still visible inside. A Greek temple became a
Christian church, a Muslim mosque and finally a Sicilian baroque
cathedral — with Norman era mosaics thrown in for good
measure.
We travel on to the village of Bagheria, about 20 miles east
of Palermo where, among the summer homes of old Sicilian aristocracy,
we meet Giuseppe Ducato, a painter of traditional Sicilian
carts.
Way before cars, the intricately decorated cart was used
to transport everything from farm products to personal belongings
to children. On festival days, it was pulled by a horse decked
out in beautiful tapestry with a tall feather plume on his
head. Many of Giuseppe’s orders are from American Sicilian
communities who want to preserve a piece of the old country.
He has even shipped three of his carts to Disneyland.
A carpenter, a wood carver and a decorative metal craftsman
have already plied their trades by the time the cart comes
to the master painter. Giuseppe inscribes miles of miles of
precise geometric designs in bright colors with a delicate
sable brush he crafted himself. These form the frame for more
realistic scenes featuring the daring exploits of Charlemagne’s
knights errant, scenes recreated in the famous Opera dei Pupi
(puppet theatre). They look like paintings we might see in
a Renaissance museum.
The wood carver has supplied totems, angel figures, and
other fanciful creatures to support the bottom of the cart
— they also climb in columns up its side. Giuseppe’s
paintbrush gives each creation its own distinctively colorful
character. Filigree metalwork of intricate design adds to
the overall artistry.
A cart takes a year to complete and costs $30,000. During
our visit, we see at least six carts lined up awaiting his
brush — and Giuseppe is 73.
When
he gets a new order for a cart, Giuseppe asks his client to
light a candle to the Madonna, so that he may finish all the
orders he has. There is some hope, though. He tells us that
his son will finish architecture school in a week and will
come to work with him. He seems to have a new optimism that
he will be able to finish all his commissions before he dies.
As we drive through this marvelous island, we understand
Giuseppe’s inspiration for his colorful art. We witness
the ever-changing colors of the vineyards, olive groves, citrus,
lemon, tangerine, orange, and almond trees laden with fruit,
cacti with prickly pear, palms of all types, bougainvillea
in riotous color exploding everywhere, rich coastal vistas
and the deep crystalline turquoise sea.
Rising from a bluff in the midst of this carnival of color
is a “destination building” — an example of architecture
so fine, so captivating, that it by itself is worth a trip.
Just five miles or so south of chaotic Palermo, the Cathedral
of te is a dazzling display of elements from Greek, Arab,
Roman, Venetian and Moorish artisans. It’s a fascinating
blend of the best from 12th century Christian and Muslim worlds.
Walk through the great doors of this monument that Norman
King William II ordered begun in 1174, and you’ll feel
like you’ve stepped into a three-dimensional illuminated
manuscript. Almost 70,000 square feet of golden mosaics depicting
Old and New Testament scenes — more than in St. Mark’s
in Venice — cover every inch of this cathedral, bathing
everything and everyone in a glittering wave of gold.
To give your senses time to recover after this breathtaking
adventure in art and history, stroll the cobblestone lanes
of Monreale. Don’t forget to visit one of the town’s
legendary pasticerrias for a ricotta Cassata, marzipan or
delicate pallines made from Sicily’s own lemons and
oranges.
The final destination of our two-week odyssey is Mondello,
a charming seaside village with shops and restaurants within
easy walking distance. It’s also the perfect spot for
exploring the richness of Palermo, 15 minutes away by car.
Wandering the village’s winding cobblestone lanes one
evening, we stumble upon an empty restaurant. A table on the
sidewalk outside is laden with today’s fresh catch.
The chef/owner gives us a mischevious grin as he waits for
the evening’s customers, chin resting on his hand underneath
the archway that frames his kitchen. Before him, lovingly
prepared and displayed, are at least 30 different antipasti.
(photo)
As the diners arrive, he whips the kitchen into a frenzy,
preparing everything from scratch, including elaborate roses
formed from purple cabbage and lemon peel garnish. Before
a dish is served, the waiter slowly walks each creation through
the restaurant for all to admire, to rounds of enthusiastic
applause.
The next morning, we walk by the restaurant and pause to
watch the chef negotiate with the produce vendor for that
day’s creations. Neat crates of cucumber, lettuce, tomatoes
and squash, begin to pile up outside the door. Precisely as
the last crate is delivered, out comes the chef, crisp order
sheet in hand. Just as we observed in the market in Siracusa,
the quality, color, firmness and price of each piece of produce
are open to dramatic debate.
There are however some disagreements erupting into wild gesticulations
with hands raised to the heavens, mopping of brows and, in
one case, a clutching of chest. The vendor grabs a crate from
the hands of the chef and stomps away in a big fat pout. A
waiter is dispensed to bring him back, the price is finally
agreed upon, and money is counted into the hand of the waiting
purveyor.
We are grateful for this free morning’s entertainment,
but as the vendor ultimately leaves with the yellow squash
in question, we worry if this relationship has been undeniably
severed.
Luckily we linger to finish our cappuccino long enough to
see the vendor return with his son, smiles and back slapping
all around, as they pick up lunch from the kitchen and help
themselves to sodas in the refrigerator. Business is business
and nobody allows a little business to interfere with lifelong
friendships.
I remember reading that in Sicily, nothing moderate can survive.
And I begin to understand.