Classroom lesson 路 Food馃嚥馃嚬 Malta

Fenkata - the family feast

A long, slow countryside meal shared with the whole family

A bubbling pot of Maltese rabbit stew with herbs and tomato sauce

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

A fenkata (say 'fen-KAH-ta') is the name for a big, slow Maltese country meal centred on stewed rabbit cooked with garlic, wine, tomato and herbs. Families and friends gather at long tables - often outdoors in summer - and eat together for hours. It is Malta's most traditional special-occasion meal.

Tell me more

The cook starts hours before everyone arrives. The rabbit is slowly browned in a big pan with lots of garlic, then simmered with onion, tomato, herbs and a splash of wine until the meat is soft and tender. The kitchen fills with a deep, savoury smell.

A fenkata is usually two courses, not one. First, the pasta - cooked in the juices of the rabbit stew - is served, deep red and full of flavour. Then the meat and the thick sauce arrive on a big platter for everyone to share. Bread is passed around for mopping the plate clean.

Fenkati are most often held in summer, in big open-air country restaurants in places like M摹arr and Bahrija, with kids running around between the tables and grandparents telling stories. It is much less about the food and much more about being together for an entire afternoon.

Vegetarian families have their own versions - a tomato-and-vegetable stew with the same long pasta course, the same big shared bowls, the same hours of chatter. The food is different; the heart of the meal is the same.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might a meal that lasts a whole afternoon feel different from one that lasts ten minutes?
  2. 02What is a meal in your family that brings everyone together?
  3. 03In Malta the pasta comes first and the meat second. Are there meals in your culture with a 'right order'?
Try this

Classroom activity

Plan a 'class long lunch'. As a group, decide: what would each course be? Who would bring what? Who would lay the table? Make a poster for the menu. Even one shared lunch as a class makes you understand why people love a fenkata.