Magazine Dichecibo6.it

Navigation
  • English
    • Italiano (Italian)

Recent Posts


  • FOOD, BEER AND WINE IN ANCIENT EGYPT – THE SHEDEH OF TUTHANKAMON AND THE MAREOTICO WINE OF CLEOPATRA
  • SI CUCINE CUMME VOGLI’I…(If you cook as I want)
  • What pet food r u? – Delicious bowls
  • New Atlantis by Francis Bacon Land, food, Neverland and all that goes with it
  • Bauerngarten: the essence of South Tyrol in a few square metres
  • Food and jazz sound good together
  • The protein-based diet of the mycenaean heroes. Red meat and game for Achilles, Odyssey and Agamemnon.
  • New Atlantis by Francis Bacon: Land, food, Neverland and all that goes with it
  • Numero Six 2021-08-02
  • Number Five 2021-03-22
  • Number Four 2020-06-15
  • Number Six 2021-08-02
  • Number Tree 2020-03-16
  • Number Five 2021-03-22
  • Number Two 2019-12-09
  • Number Four 2020-06-15
  • Number One 2019-09-20
  • Number Tree 2020-03-16
  • Events
  • Number Two 2019-12-09
  • Staff
  • Number One 2019-09-20
  • Number Zero 2019-05-01
  • Staff
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
info@dichecibo6.it
instagram
facebook

Quarterly Num.R.G.2728/2019 - num.reg.Print 6093 in date 28/02/2019 registred at Tribunale di Firenze

Copyright © Magazine Dichecibo6.it. 2025 • All rights reserved.

Hydra WordPress Theme by EckoThemes.

Published with WordPress.

Related Articles

Filter by Category

  • Food and History(27)
  • Food and Society(20)
  • Food and Art(16)
  • Interviews(13)
  • Man and Food(9)
  • Food and Science(8)
  • In Vino Veritas english(7)
  • Food and TRAVEL(4)
  • Food and innovation(4)
  • Food and yong people(3)
  • food-and-fashion(1)
  • Food, Biology and Nutrition(1)
  • Editorial(1)

Filter by Author

  • Agnese Raucea (2)
  • Alice Dini (2)
  • Andrea Battiata (2)
  • Anna Cafissi (19)
  • dichecibo6? (4)
  • Carlotta Fonzi Kliemann (2)
  • Chiara Murru (2)
  • Denata Ndreca (2)
  • Fiamma Domestici (14)
  • Francesca Cialdini (2)
  • Franco Banchi (29)
  • Giovanna Frosini (2)
  • Ilaria Loli (2)
  • Ilaria Persello (26)
  • Luca Galantini (10)
  • Marco Maldera (8)
  • Marta Mariotti (2)
  • Massimo Bartoli (2)
  • Monica Alba (2)
  • Nicoletta Arbusti (41)
  • Paolo Baracchino (6)
  • Rossana Gravina (4)
  • Sasha Perugini (2)
  • Silvia Ciappi (2)
Back to Latest Articles
Editorial

Preface 2023

Preface – magazine 2023 A contemporary magazine feeds upon dynamism and vigour. It instantly perceives the inputs deriving from the readers and evolves, offering its best at...

Posted on 30th January 2023 by Nicoletta Arbusti

Food and Society

Every Friday

A Sicilian story Every Friday, I have dinner with tuna salad. For years now. This weekly ritual also carries a previous phase: the purchase of cans, caskets of fish. I’m not...

Posted on 12th March 2020 by Agnese Raucea

Interviews

The “Chamber of Wonders” of wine

An encounter with Paolo Baracchino Excellent wine critic “I hate wood. I hate the overloading feeling of wood, which must be of help in the blend and not hide any...

Posted on 11th March 2020 by Nicoletta Arbusti

Food and History

Kant and The Critique of Culinary Reason

The rigorous and meticulous Immanuel Kant, the milestone of modern philosophy, pleasure and pain of high school students, also had its own detailed “gastronomic...

Posted on 11th March 2020 by Franco Banchi

Interviews

Medical hypnosis in nutrition

An interview with Dr Andrea Sodaro It is always a joy when Andrea Sodaro and I get in touch or meet. We have known each other for many years, since after he got his high school...

Posted on 11th March 2020 by Nicoletta Arbusti

Food and Art

Welcome to “Paradiso”

The garden of Daniel Spoerri, Founder EAT ART Old maps register it under the name of “Il Paradiso”. We are on the slopes of Monte Amiata, in front of the picturesque...

Posted on 11th March 2020 by Fiamma Domestici

Food and History

The Mysteries of Demeter and the heady drink

Since the dawn of time, man has tried to get in touch with the gods, perceived as superior intelligence, through the modified states of consciousness, both with the help of...

Posted on 11th March 2020 by Anna Cafissi

Food and Society

Food in cartoons

From Snow White’s cake to Homer Simpson’s donuts Delicacies have accompanied cartoons since their kick-off. It all began with a cake, the cake SnowWhite (1938) makes for the seven...

Posted on 11th March 2020 by Ilaria Persello

Food and History

DAYS AND HOLIDAYS: THE FLORENTINE RENAISSANCE AT THE TABLE

To talk about Florentine festivals, with particular reference to the Renaissance, means to look in-depth at the very fabric of the “City of the lily”, in all its sides...

Posted on 9th December 2019 by Franco Banchi

Food and Society

DETECTIVE STORIES AND THEIR MEDITERRANEAN FLAVOUR

Food surfaces in some “Mediterranean” detective stories, in different degrees, perfectly inserted in the narrative plot and not mere decorative accessory.«The...

Posted on 9th December 2019 by Ilaria Persello

Food and Art

FOOD in ART: An interview with Roberto Casamonti, founder of the Tornabuoni Art Galleries in Florence

Food has always had a place and a very distinct role in art, from the ancient world to today. Food is the protagonist in still life paintings and an important iconographic element...

Posted on 9th December 2019 by Fiamma Domestici

View Latest Posts
Logo
Food and Society

Every Friday


Agnese Raucea
Every Friday
Posted on 12th March 2020 by Agnese Raucea
  • Italian
  • English

A Sicilian story

Every Friday, I have dinner with tuna salad. For years now.

This weekly ritual also carries a previous phase: the purchase of cans, caskets of fish. I’m not sure why, but I enjoy the sight of these cans on the shelves and, with a careful eye, I imagine I am seeking for the least anonymous package of identical fish containers, all evenly crammed one on top another. I walk between the departments according to a now fixed path, with no rush. Still, every step I take in the supermarket’s fresh produce area brings to my mind a past time running inside of my legs and me. Once, I looked for the best fish at the Marzamemi market, pointing straight to the eyes of these giants torn from the sea. Today, all that remains are my inspection of the tin boxes and the vivid memory of the blood-soaked counter that still moves me when I am in front of shelves stocked with long-life tuna.

Every Friday, we had dinner with salad and seafood.

My family and I waited for the weekend to eat well, stuff ourselves with fresh fish, go to the market and throw ourselves in the hunt for the finest fished tuna. In truth, I was so short that I could not spot every movement at my best, as I would have liked. Therefore, I hid behind my mother’s long skirt and, turning my eyes to the sea and the sky, I tried to perceive the differences of such performance I lived through week by week. For some months, I found the visit to the market even more pleasant because I knew I would find my father who had started working for the Sea, after leaving the countryside. He used to say, “I work for the sea.” We all chuckled at this claim, believing that dad wanted to deny the authority of the Prince who little appreciated any continuous sacrifice. Dad always replied, “I work for the sea because I use nets, not hoes and rakes”. Thus, I understood how to be grateful for the nets and the arms of the fishermen and, very soon, I learned that for my parents the Sea was not the aquatic alternative of the land: the Sea was still Earth, with distinct rules, with other worthy inhabitants.

When I realised I could see my father in the waves, like an actor on the stage of Marzamemi, I went to the shore even more often. I used to watch from afar and try to predict the quality of the catch by observing both the boats returning and the fishermen expressions. As an expert lookout, I had chosen a place entirely reserved for me. I became the director of a drama with an always-surprising ending. It was a tonnara, a quiet place, where I met a few people, and usually different. There, a woman always smiled at me since I always met her in such a place. Only today, I understand why all the other women did not look nor speak to her while men smiled at her. At the time, I thought that woman was like the sea, belonging to all and none at the same time.

One day, I noticed a coat hanging from the mast of a boat. Its shadow overlooked the market from above. After weeks of shortage and sad looks, I did not know what value assign to this vision. However, I immediately caught the extraordinary nature of that day and hence I would have desired to nearly double the size of my eyes not to miss any detail. The inhabitant of the sea, just arrived at the market, was a very large tuna, bellied more than ever, an attractive magnet for the eyes of all the people present. The air that day was not only loaded with salt, blood and algae; it was also a day of celebration, and its protagonist was indeed that silvery-skinned colossus. The fishermen, already smelling of wine, added their celebration tunes to the usual market cries. The water was very dark, almost unable to extinguish all the blood spread from the near pier. Joy had become fish blood and fisherman’s sweat. Next to the waving coat, the symbol of the big booty of the day, I saw my father’s face free from the tensions of the previous days, of Fridays made of simple salads.

The party atmosphere seemed destined to go on forever. I found that I was no longer alone observing the arrival of the boats: we were a hemicycle of faces arranged in mystical expectation. I do not know if joy was louder than the chants but it was certainly an effective call for the Prince. He showed up in his dark clothes and his face half-covered by a hat he always wore on his head; after all, he had become accustomed to considering any reverential act alien to his gestures. That day, however, even the Rais, the chief of the tuna dealers, seemed different from the usual, sensitive to that strange atmosphere. The Prince came forward with a large tray in his hand, overloaded with almond pastries, sweets that in the collective imagination were associated with moments of family parties. For the first time, my childish eyes glimpsed some kindness in this man, gloomy in every story told, oblivious to every rumour. Quickly, the sweets distributed as a tribute to the fishermen became the symbol of a silent protest. The Rais, my father and all the other fishermen started filling the mouth of the tuna with these biscuits. They thus refused the Prince’s prize, such a miserable reward for their efforts, and an exceptional crown for jaws accustomed to blood and saltwater.

That day I understood the faultiness of my eyes, to which those sweets ‐ like everything that had seemed beautiful to me so far – had appeared appropriate gifts.

I understood that I also carried something sweet in me: deep inside, a consciousness was born.

Today, it’s Friday and I will eat a tuna salad.

I will wait to be alone at home. I will set the table, cut the onion into small pieces and repeat the same process with the fresh tomato. In opening the can I just bought, I will try to uncover my memories as well and feel the fresh smell of the sea under my nostrils. The recurrence of these gestures of mine is not the true mystery of this ritual because there is no nostalgia between my fingers. Time also passes through Sicily, where the Earth becomes the border of the Sea.

AGNESE RAUCEA

Agnese Raucea
  • Share Article:
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit

Related Articles

Food and Society

The food-pleasure list

We are used to making lists and catalogues, especially now that our phones measure everything, our steps, and the time we spend on the phone or on social media or disposing of...

Posted on 1st May 2019 by Sasha Perugini
Food and Society

The kimchi war between the people’s Republic of China and South Korea

In recent months, South Korea has risen against Beijing’s want to associate the pao cai speciality with its most representative and identifying gastronomic recipe based on...

Posted on 2nd August 2021 by Luca Galantini
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.AcceptReject Read More
Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT
  • Italiano
  • English