If it’s St. Joseph’s Day, We Must Have Pasta con Sarde

If it’s St. Joseph’s Day, We Must Have Pasta con Sarde

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Tomorrow is St. Joseph's Day, a celebration which began in Sicily in the Middle Ages when the region experienced severe drought. In desperation, the people asked St. Joseph, their patron, to intervene. They promised, if rain came, that they would prepare a big feast in his honor. These prayers were answered with rainy weather and, in gratitude, huge banquet tables were set up in the streets and the poor were invited to come and eat as much as they wanted.

Preparing a St. Joseph’s Table is a daunting and labor intensive task. It involves cooking several different dishes in order to fill the dinner table with a bounty that could feed the masses. Growing up in a Sicilian family, I looked forward to St. Joseph Day and to the feast my family would lovingly prepare. One of the dishes I enjoyed the most is Pasta con Sarde (pasta with sardines). Although my family made their sarde sauce from scratch, I have a short cut version that takes minutes to prepare, and you can get the ingredients every day of the year, right here in Buffalo.

All you will need for your Pasta con Sarde is:

1 lb of pasta (I use Gondola egg noodles) . your favorite tomato sauce (I make my own but Guercio’s bottled pasta sauce works perfectly for this dish) . 1 can of sarde sauce (which you can also find at Guercio’s year round)

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The sarde sauce ingredients are listed as: young fennel, sardines, raisins, onion, sunflower oil, sardine puree, salt and pepper. Feel free to embellish the recipe, as I do, by adding more of any of the listed ingredients, to create a sauce full of the flavors you most enjoy. I prefer to add some sauteed chopped fresh fennel bulb and more chopped raisins to the sauce, which gives a nice fresh flavor to the finished dish.

The procedure is simple: In a sauce pan heat the tomato sauce, add the amount of the canned sarde sauce to your liking and bring to heat on medium. Prepare the pasta according to the package, drain thoroughly and combine it with the sauce mixture. That's it!

Most Sicilians do not use grated cheese with fish dishes, feeling the cheese may over power the flavor of a dish. With Pasta con Sarde the traditional garnish is toasted bread crumbs, which are easy to make, by lightly toasting packaged bread crumbs in a saute pan with a little butter until browned and crispy.

You do not need to prepare a St. Joseph’s Day table in order to enjoy one of the most popular dishes from that table, and you don’t have to wait until March 19th to get the ingredients. Enjoy!


Guercio & Sons
250 Grant Street, Buffalo, 14213
716.882.7935

Gondola Macaroni Products
1985 Niagara Street, Buffalo 14207
716.874.4280

feed your soul buffalo

What Others Have To Say

  1. trishann4

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 18th, 15:17

    Does anybody know where I can get some St. Joseph's Day pastries? Thanks in advance!

  2. mepolo

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 18th, 15:41

    Do you mean sfinge? I'd check at Russ' over on West Ferry St.

  3. dougk

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 18th, 16:44

    if you too tired to make that st. joseph's day staple - 'pasta con sarde' - head over to frank's sunny italy on delaware and tacoma, be sure to ask for bread crumbs, never grated cheese, to sprinkle over the top.....molto bene...sicilian at its best

  4. MRodgers

    2 ratings12345
    Mar 18th, 17:09

    And the reason for the breadcrumbs? They are likened to the sawdust that St. Joseph, the Carpenter, produced!

    Michael, wonderful shortcut here. I think I might expand it by adding all ingrediants into a glass baking pan and covering it all with seasoned breadcrumbs (and, yes, with Romano Cheese mixed into the breadcrumbs) and bake it all in the oven with the thick spaghetti like pasta (has a very small hole in the center) like my Sicilian mother used to. YUM!

    I love St. Joseph's Day Tables! Now, please pass the stuffed artichokes! (With a butter lamb for Martin)

  5. leadi

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 18th, 18:07

    Michael - can we just come over to your house? The photo is making me hungry and the recipe sounds delicious! I am happy to bring some Sicilian wine for the event! :)

  6. Mrrealestate

    1 ratings12345
    Mar 19th, 05:10

    Bada Bing Bata Boom..I love to manja...St Josephs is a great day Viva Viva La St Josepies !! (forgive the spelling..)

  7. Elbowgrease

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 19th, 09:06

    Beautiful pictures! I never heard the breadcrumbs being likened to sawdust before but that's interesting. My family always claimed it was more representative of it being a time of poverty/drought/famine and there was no cheese to be had.

  8. rdominguez

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 19th, 09:55

    Thanks for this article- since I'm not Italian, it was really interesting to read about this dish.

  9. MichaelFranco

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 19th, 10:31

    MRodgers- Elbowgrease-

    I have heard both theories, and I thank you for contributing to the history of this piece-Happy St. Joseph's Day.

    Betty,

    Happy birthday, my beautiful friend.

  10. brendano

    1 ratings12345
    Mar 19th, 13:04

    Today isn't actually St. Joseph's Day, it was actually last Saturday due to the early Holy Week. But happy St. Joseph's Day anyway.

    Now, as a parishioner of St. Anthony's (Italian) Catholic Church, an Italian speaker, and a second-generation Sicilian, I'm going to vent...

    Mrrealestate, your comment was really insulting, and I bet you knew it would be. It doesn't make any Sicilian/Italian (even American) laugh unless they too have adopted the typical, false stereotypes of "mangia" and "bada-bing," etc. Bada-bing isn't even a deritive of a poor Americanized Sicilian like mangia is!

    Don't insult good Saint Joseph - San Giuseppe - either. You made no effort at all (try googling) to spell his name correctly. Anyone can see right through you.

    Thank God for places of true Italian culture like St. Anthony's which probably had the most authentic table.

    Viva San Giuseppe!

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