Italian Cured Fish

Bottarga, colatura, baccalà, acciughe sotto sale — Italy's preserved fish traditions are ancient and extraordinary.

Bottarga di Muggine

Must-See
SardiniaWhere/Type
Mullet roeKey fact

Salted, pressed, and dried mullet roe — Italy's "poor man's caviar." Grated over spaghetti or shaved thin with celery and lemon. Cabras (Sardinia) produces the finest. Intense, savoury, umami-rich.

Colatura di Alici

Must-See
Cetara, AmalfiWhere/Type
Anchovy essenceKey fact

The liquid gold of the Amalfi Coast — fermented anchovy extract, descended from Roman garum. A few drops transform spaghetti. Buy from producers in Cetara (the fishermen's village). €10-15 for a small bottle.

Baccalà (Salt Cod)

Must-See
All ItalyWhere/Type
Preserved codKey fact

Once a poverty food, now a delicacy. Baccalà alla vicentina (Vicenza), baccalà fritto (Rome), baccalà with chickpeas (Sicily). Each region has its signature preparation.

Acciughe sotto Sale

Must-See
Liguria, SicilyWhere/Type
Salt-packed anchoviesKey fact

Whole anchovies layered with sea salt and aged in barrels. Rinsed and filleted before use. Infinitely better than tinned anchovies in oil. A pantry essential.

Tonnetto Sott'olio

Must-See
SicilyWhere/Type
Preserved tunaKey fact

Tuna packed in olive oil — the artisanal Sicilian version is incomparably better than industrial canned tuna. Tonnara di Favignana is the most famous producer.

💡 Pro tip: Bottarga is expensive but a little goes far — grate it like Parmesan over simple spaghetti aglio e olio. It's one of Italy's most underappreciated ingredients outside Sardinia.

Where to start

Buy colatura di alici in Cetara on the Amalfi Coast — the tiny fishing village produces it in traditional barrels. A €12 bottle lasts months and transforms pasta.

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