10th World Week of Italian Cuisine prelaunch brings a taste of Sicily to Budapest – photos

Budapest’s Casa Pomo d’Oro – part restaurant, part culinary stage – was awash with the scent of Nubia garlic, sun-drenched tomatoes and freshly ground cinnamon on Tuesday morning, as Sicilian chef Maria Piera Spagnolo took over the kitchen for a live cooking demonstration. The event, hosted at Gianni Annoni’s well-known restaurant in the Hungarian capital, marked the lead-up to the 10th edition of World Week of Italian Cuisine.
Chef Piera Spagnolo, who helms Ristorante Tha’am in San Vito Lo Capo, brought a taste of the Mediterranean to the Hungarian capital, serving up fish couscous and stories from the Sicilian coast.
The upcoming 10th World Week of Italian Cuisine
In attendance were Giuseppe Scognamiglio, Italy’s recently appointed ambassador to Hungary, and Giovanna Chiappini Carpena, director of the Italian Trade Agency’s Budapest office, which organised the event. In a brief address, Carpena pointed to this year’s theme – health, tradition and innovation – as a guiding thread for the week ahead, with further events planned across Hungary as part of the global culinary celebration.
The upcoming 10th World Week of Italian Cuisine is a particularly significant edition, not only because it marks a decade of celebrating culinary heritage, but also because there are ongoing discussions about whether Italian cuisine itself might soon be recognised by UNESCO as part of the World Heritage.
Since its launch in 2016, the World Week of Italian Cuisine initiative has led to more than 10,000 events across over 100 countries – from cooking demonstrations and conferences to masterclasses, cultural gatherings and promotional showcases. The November events, Chiappini Carpena added, will highlight the country’s deep connection between food, well-being and identity.
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Gianni Annoni teams up with Chef Maria Piera Spagnolo
For Hungarians, Gianni Annoni needs little introduction. The Milan-born restaurateur, long a fixture of Budapest’s gastronomic scene, has spent years championing Italian cuisine through his restaurants and television appearances. His Casa Pomo d’Oro is not just a restaurant but a small embassy of Italian cuisine.
On this occasion, Annoni was joined by Chef Maria Piera Spagnolo, whose restaurant Tha’am (“food” in Arabic dialect) sits just a few metres from the turquoise waters of San Vito Lo Capo. There, she prepares traditional dishes with a distinctly Sicilian identity. Chef Piera Spagnolo’s passion for cooking, she told the audience, was passed down by her mother, who taught her that food is “a story told with the hands.”
From the Maghreb to Sicily: the journey of cous cous
Cùscusu, as it’s known in Sicilian dialect, is a dish born of centuries-old exchange – an Arab legacy from Sicily’s medieval past, adopted and adapted by coastal communities in Trapani. In time, lamb and Mediterranean fish replaced chickpeas, and the dish became a local staple.
It was, as Chef Piera Spagnolo suggested, a symbol of Sicily’s crossroads identity.
“The cuisine of the poor,” added Annoni, “is often the richest.”
Making Sicilian cous cous, we were told, is not for the hurried. It requires time, rhythm and touch. “You must hold the floury mixture as you’d hold a woman’s breast,” Chef Piera Spagnolo quipped, gently shaping the semolina with her hands.
The final dish – San Vito Lo Capo cous cous with mixed fish, almonds, cinnamon, garlic, onion, parsley and chilli – was a masterclass in balance. Cinnamon, she insisted, is non-negotiable. “It’s not sweet here; it gives depth.”
San Vito Lo Capo’s famous cous cous fest
As she stirred, Chef Piera Spagnolo turned to San Vito Lo Capo’s Cous Cous Fest—an unlikely culinary summit held each September in her tiny fishing village. Launched in 1998 under the slogan “Make Cous Cous, Not War,” the festival set out with a disarmingly simple goal: to use food as a force for unity.










