Maleth
Junior Member
- Messages
- 1,917
- Reaction score
- 335
- Points
- 83
- Location
- Malta
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- EV13 A7136 y18675G+
- mtDNA haplogroup
- H
Maltese cuisine is not exactly what comes to your mind when one thinks food. Malta has been influenced apart from the aboriginal country style cooking in less prosperous times, from Sicilian (and Italian), Provance (South France) (through the knights as it know that thats were the main chefs came from during their time here) and undoubtedly some British influence (the use of butter, curry, potato chips and mash and so on)
The most popular and traditional snack would be 'pastizzi' filo pastry filled mostly with Rikotta or mushy peas (found for sale everwhere), but the filling can be done with anything else. Also can be done with a kind of open pastry (not filo) and open from the top called qasattat. Much of the local dishes are baked like baked Maccaroni (Fqarrun fil forn) or baked rice (ross fil forn) i believe are all a Maltese concoction.
The most popular and traditional snack would be 'pastizzi' filo pastry filled mostly with Rikotta or mushy peas (found for sale everwhere), but the filling can be done with anything else. Also can be done with a kind of open pastry (not filo) and open from the top called qasattat. Much of the local dishes are baked like baked Maccaroni (Fqarrun fil forn) or baked rice (ross fil forn) i believe are all a Maltese concoction.