In Sicily, Tasting Seafood With a Skeptical Son [View all]
So heres the plan, I told my 8-year-old son, Luke. Were going to different restaurants every day and eat new things every meal.
"What do they eat in Sicily?
A lot of fish.
Cant you write about something else?
I am a passionate angler and writer on the oceans, and Sicily had been for me the coveted fishy bulls-eye at the center of the Mediterranean, a place where seafood is brought to table transformed by an ancient mélange of European and North African cookery. My son, though, has a landlubbers palate and a tendency toward the plain. But when opportunity arose to journey to Sicily, I decided it was time to escape our child-imposed culinary straitjacket.
On the advice of the cookbook author Nancy Harmon Jenkins, I chose four distinct centers of Sicilian cookery: Palermo, Trapani, Catania and the hill towns around Ragusa. Along the way my partner, Esther, and I would offer Luke tiny bribes: a soccer game in Palermo, a salt marsh with flamingos in Trapani, a hike up to Mount Etnas caldera. But the center of it all would be seafood, and lots of it.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/18/travel/sicily-seafood-restaurants.html?