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Showing posts with label fish festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fish festival. Show all posts

Friday, 15 May 2015

Sagre #3- Marta Lattarino Festival





Another week, another delicious food festival to celebrate in good ol’ Italia. This week we’re giving you a glimpse into the Sagra del Lattarino – which isn’t a million miles away from Camogli’s fish festival.




Lattarino – or “atherina boyeri” if you insist on calling them by their biological name – are tiny silver fish which live in a number of the lakes in central Italy. The festival celebrating them takes place in Marta, a little town on the shores of Lake Bolsena, in Latium, northwest of Rome. Marta has had a thriving fish industry for centuries, as well as producing olive oil and a wine called Cannaiola, which means “warbler”. Sweet. This very specific sagra came into being in the 1980s, when a group of locals decided it would be appropriate to have a festival marking their appreciation for their environment and the gastronomic delights offered by the lake.





As with Camogli’s festival, the Sagra del Lattarino is a great occasion for (mostly local) people to come together and celebrate food. Again there is an enormous pan involved, though not as big as Camogli’s – sorry Marta! The little silver fish are coated in flour then fried and handed out among all those present. The festival costs about 10 euros to attend and as well as the fish there are fried “pizzetta” or mini pizzas, lemon bread, cheese, pastries and wine. You can’t say the Italians don’t know how to live, eh? 




Friday, 8 May 2015

Sagre #2 - Camogli Fish Festival



Carrying on with Sagre month this week and we have the Camogli Fish Festival, or the Sagra del Pesce, also known as the “Fish Festival of Saint Fortunato” (patron saint of fishermen! Who knew?)
The festival started in 1952, born out of a WW2 tradition of local fishermen’s wives offering fish to the Holy Virgin as thanks for keeping them safe from the war. It takes place in Camogli, a small port town near Portofino in Liguria, which is a coastal (duh) region in North West Italy. Camogli is known as one of Liguria’s “best-kept secrets”, with its colourful houses and beautiful beaches. It has managed to stay reasonably free of mass tourism thanks to its lack of large carpark. How about that?! It is nicknamed the “City of a Thousand White Sailing Ships” due to its prestige as a large seaport in the Middle Ages which accommodated hundreds of Tall Ships in its heyday, and is a 20-minute train-ride away from Liguria’s capital of Genoa.


The festival consists, essentially, of locals, visitors, and tourists being graced with free helpings of fried fish. Over 30, 000 servings, or around 3 tonnes, of blue fish are fried up by the fishermen themselved, in the world’s largest frying pan, which measures 5 metres across and has a 7-metre-long handle.



The night before, there is a huge firework display, and Camogli’s two neighbourhoods (Porto and Pinetto) compete to see which can build a bigger bonfire. These bonfires – which are often up to 2 stories high - are then lit by a “fire-wire” which stretches down from the church’s highest steeple! (Don’t worry though, the fire brigade is always at hand, just in case!)