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Maltese Cuisine
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Maltese cuisine is a sun-soaked blend of Sicilian, North African, and British influences. Rabbit, lampuki fish, and pastizzi define this small island's big culinary personality.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Maltese cuisine
Maltese cuisine is a Mediterranean crossroads in miniature, shaped by nearly every civilization that dominated the central Mediterranean over three millennia. The Phoenicians, Romans, Arabs, Normans, Knights of St. John, French, and British all left culinary fingerprints on this tiny archipelago. The Arab period (870-1091) had the most profound and lasting impact, introducing citrus fruits, cotton, cumin, sesame, and irrigation techniques that transformed Maltese agriculture.
The Semitic Maltese language itself, unique in Europe, reflects this Arab heritage. The Knights of St. John, who ruled Malta from 1530 to 1798, brought aristocratic European cooking traditions and recruited cooks from across the Mediterranean, creating a noble cuisine that blended Italian, French, and Spanish influences.
Sicilian proximity ensured ongoing exchange of pasta dishes, pastry techniques, and tomato-based cooking. British colonial rule (1800-1964) introduced tea culture, roast meat traditions, and certain baked goods. Yet beneath these layers, the Maltese kitchen maintained a distinctly local character built on seasonal ingredients from the limestone landscape: capers, sun-dried tomatoes, rabbit, fresh fish, local cheese (gbejniet), and the beloved ftira flatbread. Kunserva (sun-dried tomato paste concentrated to intense sweetness), capers (grown on the island walls and cliffs), gbejniet (small rounds of sheep or goat milk cheese), olive oil (produced locally for millennia), and bigilla (a broad bean paste seasoned with garlic and herbs).
The Semitic Maltese language itself, unique in Europe, reflects this Arab heritage. The Knights of St. John, who ruled Malta from 1530 to 1798, brought aristocratic European cooking traditions and recruited cooks from across the Mediterranean, creating a noble cuisine that blended Italian, French, and Spanish influences.
Sicilian proximity ensured ongoing exchange of pasta dishes, pastry techniques, and tomato-based cooking. British colonial rule (1800-1964) introduced tea culture, roast meat traditions, and certain baked goods. Yet beneath these layers, the Maltese kitchen maintained a distinctly local character built on seasonal ingredients from the limestone landscape: capers, sun-dried tomatoes, rabbit, fresh fish, local cheese (gbejniet), and the beloved ftira flatbread. Kunserva (sun-dried tomato paste concentrated to intense sweetness), capers (grown on the island walls and cliffs), gbejniet (small rounds of sheep or goat milk cheese), olive oil (produced locally for millennia), and bigilla (a broad bean paste seasoned with garlic and herbs).
Aljotta
Bigilla
Gbejniet
Key Flavors
soup
fish
dip
vegan
cheese
artisan
snack
vegan
soup
pasta
street-food
pastry
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Maltese cuisine
Michael Diacono
Maltese chef and food writer who has championed traditional Maltese cuisine. Heβ¦
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Maltese cuisine
The Food and Cooking of Malta
The Food and Cooking of Malta
A comprehensive guide to Maltese cuisine featuring traditional recipes for rabbit stew, pastizzi, and other national diβ¦
Explore All Dishes
7 authentic recipes from Maltese cuisine
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Showing 7 of 7 dishes
Easy
📜 Story
Aljotta
Maltese Fish Soup
Good Friday and Lent
Easy
📜 Story
Bigilla
Dried Bean Dip
Snack or appetizer
Hard
📜 Story
Gbejniet
Maltese Sheep Cheese
Any time, often aperitivo
Easy
📜 Story
Hobz biz-Zejt
Maltese Bread with Tomato and Oil
Lunch or snack
Easy
📜 Story
Kusksu
Maltese Bean and Pasta Soup
Spring, especially around Easter
Medium
📜 Story
Pastizzi
Flaky Cheese Pastries
Breakfast, snack, any time
Easy
📜 Story
Soppa tal-Armla
Widow's Soup
Lunch