9 Best Restaurants in Sicily, Italy

Forno Biancuccia

$ Fodor's choice

Lawyer-turned-baker Valeria Messina has singlehandedly revived the use of heirloom grains in Catania. At her welcoming little corner bakery, she uses tumminia, perciasacchi, maiorca, and timilia flours to create crusty sourdough loaves, focaccia, buttery biscotti, and traditional pizza marinara. Don't miss her schiacciata (a sort of filled pizza) stuffed with the ingredients of the season, from broccoli or chicory to roasted peppers with mint or anchovies and capers.

Via Mario Sangiorgi 12, Catania, Sicily, 95129, Italy
095-6681018
Known For
  • from-the-oven tastes of ancient Sicily
  • schiacciata stuffed with seasonal ingredients
  • rye from the slopes of Etna
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.

Francesco Arena

$ Fodor's choice

You'll smell this panificio and focacceria before you arrive, as the scent of baking bread wafts down the street. The 45-year-old Francesco Arena works with ancient grains (like tumminia, perciasacchi, and rusello) and a hearty mother yeast to produce tender focaccia topped with everything from sun-sweetened tomatoes to escarole, crusty loaves, ham-and-cheese filled pidone, and the flakiest croissants. Arena has bread baking in his bones; his nonna opened the first family bakery in 1939, and his father followed suit with his own in 1970.

Via T. Cannizzaro 137, Messina, Sicily, 98122, Italy
090-9218792
Known For
  • official master baker
  • detour-worthy focaccia
  • barchette, a pizza "boat" loaded with toppings
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun.

Pasticceria Diana

$ Fodor's choice

Set on a big square in Piazza Armerina that hosts the town’s weekly market, this is one of the very few pasticcerias that continue to make their own cornetti—light, delicious, and filled to order with custard cream, ricotta, jam, or chocolate. Other delights include iris (a deep-fried doughnut ball filled with chocolate) and krapfen (a doughnut ring filled with custard cream). There is a small covered terrace outside.

Piazza Generale Cascino 34, Piazza Armerina, Sicily, 94015, Italy
0935-682224
Known For
  • cornetti made from scratch straight from the oven
  • indulgent doughnut-like pastries
  • great selection of traditional Sicilian cookies
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Caffè Sicilia

$
When you need a break from the architectural eye candy, indulge in an edible sweet (and a restorative coffee or granita) at this wondrous cake shop. Their cannoli and gelato are particularly highly rated and considered some of the best in the country.
Corso Vittorio Emanuele 125, Noto, Sicily, 96017, Italy
0931-835013
Known For
  • perfect almond granita
  • delicious cannoli
  • house-made ice cream
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Nov., mid-Jan.–late-Mar.

Leonardi

$

For some great Sicilian cakes and ice cream on your way to the Archaeological Park, visit this bar-cum-pasticceria. It's popular with locals, especially on Sunday mornings, when they come for a late breakfast and take away golden trays of exquisite pastries for lunch, so you may have to line up for your cakes.

Viale Teocrito 123, Siracusa, Sicily, Italy
0931-61411
Known For
  • great coffee and cakes
  • a favorite of locals
  • handy location near the Archaeological Park

Panarea Bakery In Forno

$

If you're stocking up for a day by the sea, stop in this bakery to fill your picnic basket. In addition to the freshly baked bread (whose scent wafts into the town's narrow alleyways), look for overstuffed sandwiches, arancini, and tender focaccia. And if you haven't already gotten your cannoli fix during your time in Sicily, their pistachio-dusted version is excellent.

Via San Pietro 10, Panarea, Sicily, 98050, Italy
339-4083796
Known For
  • pizza on Saturday
  • pistachio cannolis
  • wide selection of to-go items
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun.

Pasticceria Di Lorenzo

$

Wood-lined and unadorned, this family-run pastry shop is one of the best places to try Modica’s signature crescent-shape cookies, the ‘mpanatigghi. These soft cookies are filled with a mixture of chocolate, almonds, and veal, a combination that works surprisingly well. The meat was added to the cookies as a way of making the snacks more nutritious on long voyages. The shop is also known for its delicious chocolate squares that are modeled to look like the city’s cobblestones.

Corso Umberto I 225, Modica, Sicily, 97015, Italy
0932-945324
Known For
  • family-run
  • specialty cookies
  • chocolate squares that resemble the city's cobblestones
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Wed.

Pasticceria Etna

$

Fans of marzipan will delight at the range of almond sweets on offer here in the shape of the ubiquitous fico d'India (prickly pear) and other fruit. A block of almond paste makes a good souvenir—you can bring it home to make an almond latte or granita.

Pasticceria Grammatico

$

Fans of Sicilian sweets make a beeline for this place run by Maria Grammatico, who gained international fame with Bitter Almonds, her life story of growing up in a convent orphanage, cowritten with Mary Taylor Simeti. Her almond-paste creations are works of art, molded into striking shapes, including dolls and animals. There are a few tables and a tiny balcony with wonderful views.

Via Vittorio Emanuele 14, Erice, Sicily, 91016, Italy
0923-869390
Known For
  • delicious sweets
  • uniquely shaped desserts
  • nice views
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Wed.