11 April 2020

Arches of Bread Festival

Fascinating! I am reminded of “la tavala di San Giuseppe” (St Joseph's Table) Italians make on the Feast of St Joseph.

From Atlas Obscura

Every Easter, a small Sicilian town builds a stunning cathedral out of bread.

Easter is one of the most important holidays in Italy, and many cities and towns across the country are known for their spectacular festivities. But when it comes to food, perhaps no celebration rivals the “Arches of Bread” festival (also known as the “Easter Arches”) of San Biagio Platani, in Sicily.
Every year, in the months leading up to Easter Sunday, town residents team up to create life-size structures made of herbs, beans, and bread. This unique food-architecture tradition has its roots in feudal times, when Sicilians welcomed visiting rulers by constructing arches of triumph made of marble and other precious stones. San Biagio was a farmers’ village, so instead of marble, locals opted for arches made of bread. Even after visiting rulers stopped demanding ornate displays of welcome, the tradition survived and was adapted for a religious context. As attested by a document kept in San Biagio’s main church, the diocese declared that each year a portion of the harvest was to be used for building “arches of bread.”
Today, the tradition is alive and well, and draws thousands of people to this remote rural town every Easter. Over time, the festival evolved to become a playful competition between locals. The challenge is to recreate the interior of San Biagio’s church, complete with side altars dedicated to Jesus and Mary, using food materials. One team recreates the Jesus altar; the other tackles Mary’s section. Preparations take place in abandoned warehouses that turn into secret food-sculpting labs. On Easter Sunday, the structures, featuring pasta-and-rice mosaics, date chandeliers, and bread arches, are unveiled for everyone to see.




(Pictures courtesy of Creativita di un Popolo)

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