
‘To eat in Sicily is also to feel that one is tasting the very beginnings of Italian food history. The island has been conquered by virtually every dominant Mediterranean power of the last two or three thousand years’.ยน
Inspired by two recent purchases of Sicilian cookbooks, I began to peruse the others in my collection with renewed interest. I have these books strewn about, moving from one to the other, excited by the differences and similarities and the historical references in each, some attributing Turkish and Greek influence to a style of biscuit, others noting the strong Arabic and North African legacy. So while the search is on for a make-ahead biscuit or bread for Christmas, I subject myself to a wonderful distraction as I travel back through that perfumed land of orange blossom and jasmine, the land of ancient Greek monuments, where the sea is never far away from where you are, that land of robust and exotic flavours: Sicily. I hear the words of the 12th century traveller, geographer and cartographer, the Muslim scholar al-Abu Abd Allah Muhammad al-Idrisi al-Qurtubi Hasani al-Sabti, or simply al Idrisi of Palermo, who was employed by King Roger 11 of Sicily. For 15 years, al Idrisi studied and journeyed, consulting other travellers to produce his great geography book,ย A Diversion for the Man Longing to Travel to Far off Places.ย The Sicily that al Idrisi recorded was an island of “carefully watered orchards and gardens where generations of Muslim technical expertise and commercial know-how had bequeathed a rich agriculture of lemons, almonds, pistachio nuts, cane sugar, dates, figs, carobs and more.”ยฒย I am there, back in that royal 12th Century court, where “Latin, Hebrew, Greek, Arabic and the dialects of Northern France could all be heard.”ยณ Did they also eat these delicately spiced Cuddureddi biscuits as they discussed the wonders of the world? One will never know. But as King Roger employed Muslim chefs, I have a fair idea that they did.ย Cooking can be so distracting for a time traveller like me.

One of the recent purchases, Sicilian Food, Recipes from Italy’s Abundant Isle by Mary Taylor Simeti, 1999, was introduced to me by Debi, at My Kitchen Witch whose recommendations I always trust and inevitably enjoy reading. They are books about cooking, but never contain glossy photographs. Simetti’s book is well researched, documented and timeless. The other, Sicilian Seafood Cooking, by Marisa Raniolo Wilkins, an Australian author with Sicilian heritage, came via a reminder from Roger ( not the Norman King of Sicily) at Food Photography and France whose blog is amusing and often outrageously so. I thank both of you for adding to my divertimento.
This recipe for Cuddureddi Siciliani biscuits comes from My Taste of Sicily by Dominique Rizzo, another Italo-Australiana, and was the most appealing of all the versions in my collection. Dominique learnt it from her Zia Nunzia. The biscuits contain all the essence of Sicily in one Christmassy filling: almonds, pine nuts, walnuts, figs, sultanas and currants, orange peel and marmalade, cinnamon and cloves, dark chocolate and vanilla, with a pastry moistened with Marsala. Eaten without savouring, they do resemble an English mince-pie, but are far more subtle and less cloying.
Cuddureddi Siciliani; makes 20 biscuits
The Pastry
- 260 g plain flour
- 70 g caster sugar
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 pinch salt
- 125 g unsalted butter, chopped
- 1 tablespoon Marsala
- 18o ml milk
- 40 g icing sugar ( for dusting cooked biscuits )
The Filling
- 150 g dried figs
- 35 g slivered almonds
- 1 tablespoon pine nuts
- 1 tablespoon chopped walnuts
- 100 g currants
- 50 g sultanas
- 3 teaspoons orange marmalade
- finely grated zest of 1 orange
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- ยผ teaspoon ground cloves
- 1 vanilla pod, split and seeds scraped or 1/4 teaspoon vanilla paste
- 45 g dark couverture chocolate (70 %), chopped or sliced finely.
- Sift together the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt, then transfer to a food processor. Add the butter and process until the mixture resembles course breadcrumbs. Add the Marsala to the milk, then with the motor running, add a little of the milk mixture to the flour at a time, processing until it forms a soft dough. Knead the dough on a floured board for 2 minutes, working as quickly as possible to prevent the dough from softening. Roll the dough into a ball, cover with plastic film and leave to rest in the fridge for 1 hour.

2. Cover the figs with boiling water and let them soak for 15 minutes. Drain, remove and discard the stalks. Finely chop the figs.
3. Preheat oven to 200c.
4. Place the almonds, pine nuts and walnuts on a baking tray and roast for a few minutes, and watch that they don’t colour too much. Remove and set aside.
5. Mix the figs, almonds, pine nuts, walnuts, currants, sultanas, marmalade, orange zest, cinnamon, cloves, vanilla and chocolate in a bowl. Transfer half of the mixture to a food processor and process for 3 seconds or until it comes together to form a rough paste. Return to the bowl and stir to combine. Set aside.
6. Reduce the temperature to 180c. Lightly grease ( or paper) two baking trays. Briefly knead the dough, then roll it out on a floured work surface until 2 mm thick. Cut the dough into 7 cm rounds with a pastry cutter, then place 1 tablespoon of filling in the centre of each round. Top with another round and brush the edge with a little milk. Press the edges together to form a round pillow.
7. Place the filled biscuits on the baking tray and bake for 2o minutes. Dust immediately with icing sugar and leave to cool.ย Serve warm or at room temperature. These biscuits will keep in an airtight container for up to two weeks.
Notes:
- I found 1 tablespoon of filling too much for the size of these biscuits and recommend that you lessen the quantity to fill the biscuits without splitting the pastry. Be guided by your intuition here.
- You will probably not use very much of the Marsala/milk mixture to bring together the pastry. I suggest keeping the Marsala and lessening the amount of milk.
- As the recipe is a long one, I suggest making the filling ahead, covering and storing it, then making the pastry and baking on a later day.
- These are very rewarding biscuits to make. Other versions include honey, Vincotto and use durum wheat in the pastry. Other shapes are formed too, which I may explore in a future post.

Although not a book about Sicilan cookery, I drew heavily on the opening chapters of John Dickie’s book, Delizia! The Epic History of the Italians and Their Food, Free Press, New York, 2008 which is still my favourite book about Italian food and doesn’t contain a single recipe.
ยน John Dickie, Delizia! The Epic History of the Italians and Their Food, p 15
2 John Dickie, Delizia! The Epic History of the Italians and Their Food. p.19
3 John Dickie, Delizia! The Epic History of the Italians and Their Food. P 23
Oooh, lovely. I think I have that book by Dominique! Must look this up. Thanks for your amendments too xx
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Liz, it is a really good book- the dessert section is particularly inviting.
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Francesca they sound divine, but oh so fattening. God, I know I would love them!!
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But Glenda, you don’t need many. I just had one for afternoon tea, with a little slug of Frangelico, – and then, back to the garden, my dictator and yours.
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A slug of frangelico! Sounds much more festive than a cup of tea. Most inspiring.
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I loved reading Simetti’s book, will check the library for the others. Delicious sounding”pies,” much more appealing than the regular fruit mince variety.
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They look delicious, thanks for sharing the recipe and the books. Love a good food book!
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These look absolutely amazing, I want one now! Thank you for posting the recipe.
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They are Liz, worth the effort.
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These time travelling biscuits look very special. I doubt they’d last 2 weeks, especially if there were in the vicinity of my Dad who loves such goodies.
Your lovely rose tin caught me eye as well ๐
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It’s yours!
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That’s very kind of you… I have a several now myself ๐
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Is the clove flavoring strong? And can they be frozen? I would love to make these for Christmas.
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No, the clove flavour isn’t dominant.The overall fruit and nut mixture is quite exotic but not heavy. I think you could freeze them as many folk freeze fruit mince tarts successfully.
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Move over mince pies! These cuddureddi are lovely. Sicily has such a wonderful treasure trove of recipes. I must look into those other books pictured in the post (as one can’t get enough of a good thing). Plus, the quote from Delizia was spot on.
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Cuddureddi Siciliani cakes are not the only thing Sicily is famous for and yes it does have an interesting Mediterranean history as you say. Sounds like a beautiful island like Sri Lanka (Ceylon) but not as tropical. I’ll try to make these as they sound delicious but will probably give half of them to mum to enjoy due to my ever burgeoning weight problem.
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Yes, it is a beautiful island . we spent two weeks driving around it in 2000 and now I’m keen to return.
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I was lucky enough to spend a few weeks driving around Sicily. The food, especially the sea food, was incredible! I am definitely going to get back down there. First, though, I should make these cuddureddi purely for research purposes. ๐
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I have been thinking the same thing- I wish I could drive around that island again.
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When I see posts like this I wish I lived in Warrandyte! LOL … Anything with figs has to be good doesn’t it?
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I wished you lived over here too Julie- imagine, a picnic rug on the banks of the Yarra, some bubbles and some of these Cuddureddi- Oh and a driver too!
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Hang on, I’ll be right over ๐๐
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Read this the other day and didn’t have time to comment. First of all, the new look format/theme is very nice. Also, these little parcels sound delicious, not unlike mince pies but perhaps a little more gourmet or elegant?
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They are more delicate than the trad mince pies. I was surprised to find these little sweet dried fruit things in the Sicilian tradition, especially when most Italian ( mainland) sweets are fairly uninspiring ( I’m thinking about the boring pannetone here). Sicily takes the cake when it comes to sweets.
Is the format a little dark? I hope that our eyes can read it well enough- I was wondering.
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These biscuits sounds so delicious, Francesca. Looking forward to trying them over the festive season.
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I just ate the last one for breakfast -they lasted very well .
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Oooh, these sounds fabulous – lovely flavour combination, and anything that can be made ahead is great this time of year…
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