In this episode of The Ugly Ducklings of Italian Cuisine
- Getting coal in your stocking is not necessarily a punishment.
- Hear the legend of how La Befana's annual journey started with a missed opportunity.
- Sweet coal can be prepared at home with a simple recipe.
Australian kids have Santa. In Italy they have Babbo Natale, but it doesn’t stop there. After just a few days comes La Befana and she’s just as popular.
The Befana is an old lady who brings sweets and gifts to Italian boys and girls on the night between January 5th and 6th.
There's always a little bit of fear that instead of candy and chocolate, La Befana will leave coal in your stockings hanging by the fireplace.
Raffaella D'Alonzo è la proprietaria di La Mortazza Café and Deli a Perth.
Author Daniele Foti-Cuzzola wrote a book on La Befana. Arriverà la Befana a Fremantle? (Is the Befana coming to Fremantle?) is a bilingual story by Daniele and illustrator Daniela Pruiti Ciarello that celebrates Italo-Australian culture.
Daniele Foti-Cuzzola is the author of the bilingual book "Arriverà la Befana a Fremantle?", an Italian Australian take on the popular tradition. Credit: Daniele Foti-Cuzzola
It was so sugary we used to be so high all day. It's basically all sugar with a little colour. By sucking it you would make your teeth black and your tongue black.Raffaella D’Alonzo
LISTEN TO
Sweet Coal and the Italian tradition of La Befana
SBS Italian
03/01/202323:52
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Hear from Chiara Cajelli, a food writer for and author of Per noi, per loro, a collection of recipes for humans and their four-legged friends. Chiara offers three recipes for carbone: one traditional, one modern and one for our dogs (a treat, not a punishment!).