Maltese bread explained

Maltese bread
Country:Malta
Region:Qormi
Type:Bread

Maltese bread (Maltese: Il-Ħobż tal-Malti, tal-malti) is a crusty sourdough bread from Malta, usually baked in wood ovens.[1] It is typically eaten with spread olive oil (Ħobż biż-żejt), where the bread is rubbed with tomatoes (as with the Catalan pa amb tomàquet) or tomato paste, drizzled with olive oil and filled with a choice or mix of tuna, olives, capers, onion, bigilla and ġbejna.[2] The practice of making the bread is considered a 'dying art'.[3]

In Qormi

Qormi is the main city for bread making in Malta, with a large number of bakeries. During the rule of the Knights Hospitaller, it was known as Casal Fornaro meaning the bakers' town.[4] Nowadays an annually held festival, Lejl f'Casal Fornaro (a Night at Casal Fornaro), takes place in Qormi on the third Saturday of October.

The role of bread in Maltese politics

Some of the earliest descriptive accounts of Malta note the dependence of the island's inhabitants on bread for survival.[5] The impact of the British colonial government's liberalisation of the import of grain in 1837 and its failure to provide basic food provisions in the aftermath of World War I are both factors believed to be linked to the Sette Giugno riots.[6] [7]

Bread in the Maltese language

There are a number of idioms in the Maltese language relating to bread as the basis of survival.[8]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The culinary art and culture of 'Il-Ftira Maltija' has been recognized by UNESCO - The Malta Independent. 2021-01-06. www.independent.com.mt.
  2. Web site: Malta. Lovin. 2017-01-21. 7 Ways To Use Maltese Bread That Will Have You Salivating. 2021-01-06. Lovin Malta. en-US.
  3. Web site: Watch: The rising cost of bread and Malta's dying art - The Malta Independent. 2021-01-06. www.independent.com.mt.
  4. Scientia. Cassar Pullicino. J.. 1956. Social Aspects of Maltese Nicknames. 22. 2. 87. 2017-02-24. 2021-08-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20210823212558/http://ww16.melitensiawth.com/incoming/Index/Scientia%20(Malta)/Scientia.%2022(1956)2(Apr.-Jun.)/03.pdf?sub1=20210824-0725-55ff-afff-7efc7de87171. dead.
  5. D'Autun, J.Q. The Earliest Description of Malta quoted in Cassar, C. Fenkata: An emblem of Maltese peasant resistance?
  6. Kliewer, Greta. Maltese Bread: a changing symbol of the island’s identity http://www.omertaa.org/archive/omertaa0028.pdf
  7. Blouet, pp. 188-189
  8. Cassar, C. Fenkata: An emblem of Maltese peasant resistance? Fenkata: An emblem of Maltese peasant resistance?
  9. Web site: 50 of the world's best breads. Jen Rose . Smith. 2019-10-15. CNN Travel. en. 2019-11-06.