16 Recipes That Will Transport You to Sicily

From pasta to street food, here are our favorite recipes inspired by the Italian island.

Sicilian Orange Bundt Cake
Photo: Aubrie Pick

Sicily is known for transportive summer flavors like citrus, tomatoes, eggplant, and basil. The Italian island is the home of national treasures in the country's culinary canon, from arancini and cannoli to Nero d'Avola wine and of course, fresh seafood. Channel tastes of the Mediterranean destination with Sicilian food, from bundt cake to baked pasta, with these Italian recipes.

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Sfincione

Sfincione

Morgan Hunt Glaze / Food Styling by Margaret Monroe Dickey / Prop Styling by Caleb Clark

Sfincione is a focaccia-like pizza from Sicily that is traditionally topped with tomato sauce and breadcrumbs. Crushed San Marzano tomatoes make for an intense tomato sauce in this version from Michael Hanna.

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Seltz Limone e Sale (Seltzer with Lemon and Sea Salt)

Seltzer with Lemon and Sea Salt

Frederick Hardy II / Food Styling by Emily Nabors Hall / Prop Styling by PRISSY LEE MONTIEL

This simple Italian spritz is a popular drink at many chioscos in Sicily for hydration on hot days. Inspired by cookbook author Khushbu Shah, Lucy Simon mixes crisp and effervescent water with lemon juice and Sicilian sea salt harvested from the Mediterranean sea.

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Granita di Mandorla con Panna Sotto e Sopra (Almond Granita with Whipped Cream “Top and Bottom”)

Granita di Mandorla con Panna Sotto e Sopra (Almond Granita with Whipped Cream “Top and Bottom”)

Cedric Angeles

The granita in Sicily is not the stiff, icy dessert you might find elsewhere. It has an almost churned texture to it, like a cross between a sorbet and a Slurpee. This refreshing, sweet, nutty, toasty, and creamy dish of almond granita layered with luscious panna (vanilla-sweetened cream) is from Los Angeles chef Evan Funke, who was inspired by one served at Caffè Europa in Catania, Sicily.

04 of 16

Cannoli

Cannoli

Victor Protasio / Food Styling by Torie Cox / Prop Styling by Josh Hoggle

The crisp, creamy, and beloved Italian dessert originated in Sicily. Cannoli are made of pastry dough that has been molded into tubes and fried until crispy. The fried pastries are filled with orange-scented mascarpone and ricotta cheese filling and then dipped in chopped chocolate or pistachio.

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Arancini al Ragù (Risotto Croquettes with Beef Ragù)

Arancini al Ragù (Risotto Croquettes with Beef Ragù)

Cedric Angeles

Breaded and deep-fried, these large and hearty risotto balls are from Los Angeles chef Evan Funke, who was inspired by the colossal, teardrop-shaped arancini from Pasticceria Savia, a patisserie in Catania, Sicily, that has been around since 1897.

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Sicilian Orange Bundt Cake

Sicilian Orange Bundt Cake
Aubrie Pick

Sicilian grandmothers often serve this light cake for tea. Sicilian villa Rocca della Tre Contrade shares its tender version for snacking any time of day.

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Pasta ’Ncasciata (Sicilian Baked Pasta)

Pasta ’Ncasciata (Sicilian Baked Pasta)

Fred Hardy II / Food Styling by Emily Nabors Hall / Prop Styling by Christina Daley

Sicily has many variations of the baked pasta with eggplant and cheese called ’ncasciata. Chef Michael Gulotta combines tender eggplant, buttery caciocavallo cheese, and crushed tomatoes with al dente rigatoni in this one.

08 of 16

Chicken Scarpariello

Chicken Scarpariello

Jennifer Causey / Food Styling by Julian Hensarling / Prop Styling by Shell Royster

Whether "shoemaker's chicken" originated in Sicily and Calabria or stateside, the dish of skinless, boneless chicken thighs sautéed in a tangy lemon glaze with bell pepper is an Italian-American tradition.

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Chicken Marsala

Chicken Marsala

Matt Taylor-Gross / Food Styling by Amelia Rampe

It is said that Chicken Marsala originated when Marie Antoinette’s sister, Queen Maria Carolina of Sicily and Naples, visited Marsala, Sicily, and brought along French chefs who combined the French technique of using butter and shallots to create a pan sauce with the local wine. The sauce coats chicken cutlets and mushrooms in this recipe from Evi Abeler.

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Zabaione Ice Cream

Zabaione Ice Cream

William Hereford

Marsala, a fortified wine produced in a town in Sicily by the same name, gives this frozen dessert a caramelized sweetness and a smooth and buttery finish.

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Pasta alla Norma

Pasta alla Norma
Justin Walker

This pasta is the dish of Catania, hometown of Vincenzo Bellini, and is said to take its name from the heroine of one of his most famous operas. The story goes that after seeing Norma performed, friends of the composer were so awestruck they went around describing everything they deemed outstanding as "una vera Norma" ("a real Norma").

The summer dish is simple: pasta — often penne, sometimes spaghetti — with tomato sauce; silken nuggets of fried eggplant; aromatic basil; and salted ricotta.

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Sea Bass with Sicilian Cherry Tomato Sauce

Sea Bass with Sicilian Cherry Tomato Sauce
Abby Hocking

Debi Mazar and Gabriele Corcos riff on classic Southern Italian puttanesca with their Sicilian Cherry Tomato Sauce, here made with fresh tomatoes to top grilled wild sea bass.

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Sicilian Scacciata

Sicilian Scacciata
Photo by Victor Protasio / Food Styling by Torie Cox / Prop Styling by Lydia Pursell

Scacciata is a popular Sicilian street food that stuffs a light and crispy bread dough with a variety of fillings. Valeria Messina's version features gooey provolone cheese, tender broccoli florets, Italian sausage, sun-dried tomatoes, and kalamata olives.

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Swordfish Sicilian-Style

Swordfish Sicilian-Style
© Greg DuPree

A lemony, oregano-infused sauce imparts bright flavor to hot-off-the-grill steaks, permeating pricked holes in this recipe from legendary cookbook author and Italian cooking teacher Marcella Hazan.

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Orecchiette with Pistachio Pesto

Orecchiette with Pistachio Pesto
© Con Poulos

Sicily's famous pistachio nuts, which are sweet, fruity and almost shockingly bright green, make this pesto stand out.

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Sicilian-Style Meatballs

Sicilian-Style Meatballs

© Andrew Purcell

Dried currants and pine nuts make these meatballs distinctly Sicilian, according to Frank Castronovo and Frank Falcinelli, co-owners of the Frankies Spuntino Group of Italian eateries in Brooklyn — who take biannual trips to Sicily.

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