SKU: 7446
  • Scalia Anchovy Colatura di Alici (Anchovy Syrup)
$22.95

Description

Scalia Anchovy Colatura di Alici (Anchovy Syrup)

100 ml bottle

How to use Anchovy Concentrate: 

Like any good pantry staple, Colatura di Alici adds flavor without a lot of fuss. In Italy, it is most often enjoyed as a dressing for pasta or as an addition to soups and sauces.

It's magnificent with sauteed greens, a bit of garlic and a handful of chile flakes. This Italian fish sauce plays well with other primary ingredients by discreetly adding a briny, zesty flavor without the fishy wallop of anchovy paste or nuoc cham. Blend Italian anchovy sauce with lemon juice, fresh herbs and garlic for a simple salsa verde, or add it to your caesar salad dressing.

About the Anchovies

This little fish is a small, warm water relative of the herring, a Northern European staple. And just as the peoples of the north salted their herring to preserve them, the anchovy has long been salted by fishermen and packers in the Mediterranean, where it is a staple.

Anchovies are packed in one of two ways, brined fillets that are packed in olive oil (that is, the good ones are packed in olive oil!) either in jars or cans, and whole salted fish packed in salt, usually in large cans. Of the two, salt-packed anchovies are often preferred for their meatier flavor.

What is most important about these little Sicilian blue fish is that they are only taken during the proper season - otherwise they will have a mushy texture when they are preserved - and cleaned and salted as soon as possible after they are caught. Because of Scalia's attention to detail it is possible to discover the flavor and texture of the ancient Mediterranean.

From one end of the peninsula to the other, Italians use these little, aromatic, preserved fish in almost any conceivable dish. While in the south, they seem to show up with practically the same frequency they use olive oil, they are also a common addition numerous sauces, salads, and other dishes in the north.

About the Producer

Scalia Benedetto has been one of the top Sicilian companies for preserving fish since 1973. While they're neither as large nor as old as their major competitors, this allows them to do things the old-fashioned way, and the difference is clear in the flavor and texture oil-packed fillets and salt-packed whole anchovies.

Scalia Benedetto in Sicily is one of the most reliable producers of salted anchovies now being imported to this country; quality and flavor are both abundant! We are fortunate to have found a source for this can of salt-packed anchovies for those of you who use them with the frequency of a Sicilian or a Calabrese.

The company was founded by Benedetto Scalia in Sciacca Thermae on the Agrigento coast of southwest Sicily, a city famous for its fishing fleet. Their anchovy concentrate is carefully processed by the women of Sciacca using traditional techniques.

<br> How to store your anchovies

Although salt-packed anchovies are delicious, the can is not small, and rarely would a home cook use a whole can in one dish or consume a whole can in one sitting. The best way to store your un-eaten salt-packed anchovies is to place them in a glass container and place the glass container in the back of your fridge. The salt will prevent them from going bad, so they should last for at least 6 months. Thanks for asking, "Fishy-in-Burbank".

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