MAIN INGREDIENTS
Gamberetti alla crema is a traditional dish originating from Venice. The dish is usually made with a combination of shrimps, butter, heavy cream, garlic, minced parsley, salt, and pepper. The shrimps are shelled, deveined, seasoned with salt and pepper, and cooked over high heat in butter.
A mixture of cream, garlic, and parsley is brought to a boiling point before it's poured over the shrimps. The dish is cooked for a minute or two more while shaking the pan, and it's then ready to be enjoyed.
MAIN INGREDIENTS
Capesante alla veneziana is a traditional dish originating from Venice. The dish is usually made with a combination of scallops, garlic, breadcrumbs, olive oil, lemon juice, parsley, salt, and pepper. The scallops are cleaned and dredged in breadcrumbs.
The garlic and parsley are sautéed in olive oil, and the scallops are then added to the pan and cooked until golden on both sides. The dish is drizzled with lemon juice and seasoned with salt and pepper, then served in half shells.
Seppie in umido is a traditional dish originating from Venice. The dish is usually made with a combination of sliced squid, onions, garlic, tomatoes, tomato paste, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, rosemary, oil, salt, and black pepper. The onions and garlic are sautéed in oil until soft, and then mixed with the rosemary and squid.
The mixture is covered with water and simmered for more than half an hour, and the tomatoes, tomato paste, spices, salt, and pepper are then added to the pan. The dish is slowly cooked until the sauce becomes thick and the squid is tender. Seppie in umido is typically served over polenta.
MAIN INGREDIENTS
Spaghetti alla busara is a traditional dish originating from Venice and the surrounding area. The dish is usually made with a combination of scampi (langoustines or large prawns), spaghetti, olive oil, tomatoes, garlic, parsley, white wine, salt, and pepper.
The garlic is sautéed in olive oil and removed from the pan. The scampi are added to the pan, seasoned with salt and pepper, and covered with white wine. The mixture is cooked until the alcohol evaporates and the dish is completed by adding chopped tomatoes and lowering the heat until the sauce thickens.
MAIN INGREDIENTS
Capelonghe veneziane is a traditional Venetian way of preparing razor clams. The dish is made with a combination of razor clams (capelonghe or cannolicchi), olive oil, parsley, salt, and black pepper. The razor clams are washed, soaked in cold salted water in order to remove the sand, and then cooked in olive oil until they open.
When they open, the razor clams are removed from the pan, while the cooking juices are strained to remove leftover sand. The strained liquid is mixed with olive oil, pepper, and parsley, and the dressing is then poured over the razor clams before serving.
MAIN INGREDIENTS
One of Venice's most traditional dishes, this delicious appetizer of marinated sardines originated among the fishermen and seafarers of La Serenissima as a way to preserve fish during their long voyages. Sarde in saor are made by frying fresh sardines and then marinating them either in white wine or vinegar with softly cooked onions, pine nuts, and raisins.
The dish is preferably prepared the day before serving, and it can keep well over the course of a week. In Venice, this ultimate antipasto agrodolce is found on every corner and is typically served alongside grilled polenta.
VARIATIONS OF Sarde in saor
MOST ICONIC Sarde in saor
View moreMoeche or moleche is a traditional dish hailing from Venice. This seasonal dish consists of soft shelled crabs – both males and females shed their old shells in the spring, but only the males moult in the fall. There's only a few hours from when the crabs shed their hard shells and before the new shell hardens when it contacts the water.
Enter the molecanti, local moeche fishermen who are experts at harvesting these crabs and can identify which crabs are about to molt and which not. The crabs are washed, dipped in eggs and flour, then fried until golden brown. They are traditionally served with a lemon wedge and polenta on the side.
MAIN INGREDIENTS
Granseola alla veneziana is a traditional dish originating from Venice. The dish is usually made with a combination of spider crab meat, salt, pepper, lemon juice, parsley, and olive oil. The crabs are cooked in boiling salted water, drained, and the meat is removed and cut into small pieces.
The pieces of crab meat are placed into upturned shells and dressed with a mixture of olive oil, lemon juice, chopped parsley, salt, and black pepper. Spider crabs taste the best from October to December, and it's recommended to use medium-sized specimens because they have tender meat.
MAIN INGREDIENTS
Bisato in umido is a traditional Venetian dish made with eel cooked "in umido" (meaning "in a stew" or "braised"). In this preparation, the eel is first cut into pieces, then slowly braised in a rich sauce of carrots, celery, onions, garlic, and white wine, seasoned with bay leaves, parsley, and sometimes rosemary.
This slow cooking method allows the eel to become tender while absorbing the flavors of the aromatic sauce. The dish has a distinctive, slightly earthy flavor, as eel has naturally rich and oily meat. Bisato in umido is typically served with polenta, which complements the dish’s thick, flavorful sauce.
Risotto di gò is a traditional Venetian risotto made with gò (also known as gobio or goby fish), a small fish found in the Venetian Lagoon. This dish is particularly famous on the island of Burano, where it has been cherished for generations.
The essence of risotto di gò lies in its delicate, briny flavor that showcases the freshness of the lagoon fish. To prepare the dish, goby fish is simmered to make a light, flavorful broth, which is then used to cook the risotto. The broth is often enriched with a soffritto (a sautéed mixture) of onions and olive oil, and sometimes a splash of white wine.
TasteAtlas food rankings are based on the ratings of the TasteAtlas audience, with a series of mechanisms that recognize real users and that ignore bot, nationalist or local patriotic ratings, and give additional value to the ratings of users that the system recognizes as knowledgeable. TasteAtlas Rankings should not be seen as the final global conclusion about food. Their purpose is to promote excellent local foods, instill pride in traditional dishes, and arouse curiosity about dishes you haven’t tried.