Trapani, on Sicily's western coast — facing Tunisia across 150km of sea — is the only place in Europe with a continuous, unbroken couscous tradition. The couscous arrived with the Aghlabid Arab conquest in 827 AD and never left. Trapanese couscous is made from durum wheat semolina (not the finer grain of North African couscous), hand-rolled for hours in a mafaradda (a large, textured terracotta bowl), steamed in a couscoussiera over fish broth, and served with a rich mixed-seafood stew. San Vito Lo Capo, near Trapani, hosts an annual international couscous festival — the Cous Cous Fest — where Sicilian, Tunisian, Moroccan, and other traditions compete.
The hand-rolling process takes 2+ hours: semolina is sprinkled into the mafaradda, small amounts of salted water are added, and the cook uses circular motions with open fingers to agglomerate the flour into grain-sized pellets. This is identical in principle to North African hand-rolled couscous but uses coarser Italian durum wheat. The couscous is then steamed (never boiled) in a terracotta couscoussiera over a bubbling fish broth — the steam carries the seafood flavour up into the grain.
- **Fish, never meat.** Trapanese couscous is always seafood — grouper, sea bream, shrimp, clams, mussels. This is the coastal adaptation that distinguishes it from North African meat-and-vegetable couscous. - **Hand-rolling is the technique.** Instant couscous does not produce the same result — the hand-rolled granules are larger, more irregular, and absorb broth differently. - **The broth is the soul.** The fish broth — made from heads, bones, and trimmings of the fish that will also be served in the stew — is what elevates this above a simple grain-and-fish dish. The broth is saffron-tinted, rich with seafood collagen, and deeply aromatic.
ITALIAN REGIONAL DEEP — THE FIVE KINGDOMS