Cacciucco

Cacciucco
Type Fish stew
Place of origin Italy
Region or state Liguria and Tuscany
Main ingredients Broth, fish, shellfish
Cookbook: Cacciucco  Media: Cacciucco

Cacciucco (Italian pronunciation: [katˈtʃukko]) is an Italian fish stew native to the western coastal towns of Tuscany and Liguria.[1] It is especially associated with the port city of Livorno in Tuscany[2][3] and the town of Viareggio to the north.[3]

It is a hearty stew consisting of several different types of fish and shellfish.[2][3] According to one tradition, there should be five different types of fish in the soup, one for each letter c in cacciucco.[3] A wide variety of Mediterranean fish and shellfish may be used, such as red gurnard,[3] armored gurnard,[3] scorpionfish (scorfano),[2] small clams such as littleneck or manila,[1] firm-fleshed fish such as monkfish or other whitefish, red snapper, John Dory, or grouper,[1][4] mussels,[1][4] shrimp,[1] and calamari.[1] Traditionalist chefs add a stone taken from the sea to the dish.[3] Crabs, eels, cuttlefish, octopus, bream, mullet, or anything else caught that day might be used. [5]

A wide variety of other ingredients are used in the broth, including various vegetables (which might include onions, tomatoes, leeks, zucchini, or yellow squash), spices (which might include garlic, aniseed, dried crushed red pepper, kosher salt, black pepper, parsley, thyme, or bay leaf) and other ingredients (which might include fish stock, tomato paste, vermouth, or wine, either white or red).[3][4][5] There are many variants of cacciucco, varying by region and availability of ingredients.[4]

The dish is traditionally attributed to the Near East, which might be true, as the word cacciucco comes from the Turkish kaçukli ("bits and pieces" or "odds and ends"), which reflects how the stew is made, from a variety of fish.[3]

Cacciucco is similar to other types of fish stew, such as the French bouillabaisse, Greek kakavia, Spanish zarzuela, and Portuguese caldeirada.[3][6] Cioppino, another fish stew, was created by Italian-American fisherman in San Francisco, who used the local Dungeness crab in a variation of the cacciucco recipe.[7][5]

Pellegrino Artusi, in his classic 1891 cookbook, gave the following recipe:

For 700 grams (1 12 lb) of fish, finely chop an onion and saute it with oil, parsley, and two whole cloves of garlic. The moment the onion starts to brown, add 300 grams (10 12 oz) of chopped from tomatoes or tomato paste, and season with salt and pepper. When the tomatoes are cooked, pour in one finger of strong vinegar or two fingers of weak vinegar, diluted in a large glass of water. Let boil for a few more minutes, then discard the garlic and strain the rest of the ingredients, pressing hard against the mesh. Put the strained sauce back on the fire along with whatever fish you may have on hand, including sole, red mullet, gurnard, dogfish, mantis shrimp, and other types of fish in season, leaving the small fish whole and cutting the big ones into small pieces. Taste for seasoning; but in any case it is not a bad idea to add a little olive oil, since the amount of soffritto was quite small. When the fish is cooked, the cacciucco is usually brought to the table on two separate platters: on one you place the fish, strained from the broth, and on the other you arrange enough finger-thick slices of bread to soak up all the broth.[8]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Danny Meyer, The Union Square Cafe Cookbook: 160 Favorite Recipes from New York's Acclaimed Restaurant (HarperCollins 2005).
  2. 1 2 3 Patrizia Chen, Rosemary and Bitter Oranges: Growing Up in a Tuscan Kitchen (Simon & Schuster, 2010).
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Clifford A. Wright, The Best Stews in the World, p. 235.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Pino Luongo & Mark Strausman, 2 Meatballs in the Italian Kitchen (Artisan Books, 2007), p. 154.
  5. 1 2 3 Ken Albala, Three World Cuisines: Italian, Mexican, Chinese (Rowman Altamira, 2012), p. 272.
  6. William Black, Al Dente: The Adventures of a Gastronome in Italy (Transworld, 2004), p. 63.
  7. Carolyn Miller & Sharon Smith, Savoring San Francisco: Recipes from the City's Neighborhood Restaurants (Silverback Books, 2005), p. 74.
  8. Pellegrino Artusi, Science in the Kitchen and the Art of Eating Well (1891; trans. University of Toronto Press)
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