Catania: Guided Street Food Tour with Tastings

REVIEW · CATANIA

Catania: Guided Street Food Tour with Tastings

  • 5.03 reviews
  • 3 hours
  • From $80
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Operated by Empeeria · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Food in Catania starts at the market. This guided street food walk strings together major sights like Piazza Duomo and Via Etnea with serious bites at the fish market and famous counters. I like that you get a local guide keeping the flow tight, and you also get a real mix of flavors, from fried seafood to dessert, without having to plan each stop.

The biggest drawback to flag is food limits: gluten-free dishes are not available. If you have allergies or intolerances, you’ll need to specify them when booking, since tastings are part of the deal.

You’ll finish with a souvenir you can actually use later: a postcard called The Elephant’s Way, marked with the stops and foods you tried. It’s a compact, 3-hour way to taste the city while still seeing the key corners of Catania on foot.

Key highlights worth marking on your map

Catania: Guided Street Food Tour with Tastings - Key highlights worth marking on your map

  • Cathedral start at Piazza Duomo, right in the heart of the action
  • Fish market tasting, with fried fish as a standout
  • Bar Savia arancini and Panetteria Pacini cipollina in the same food run
  • Chiosco Costa kiosk drink, the typical fizzy mix made with Selz and syrups
  • Harbor-area meat course, including horse meatballs and cipollata
  • A reserved dessert stop, with cannoli/cassatella choices or granita by season

A 3-hour Catania route that makes sense on foot

Catania: Guided Street Food Tour with Tastings - A 3-hour Catania route that makes sense on foot
This tour is built like a walkable loop: you start near Piazza Duomo, move through church-lined Via Crociferi, then continue along Via Etnea toward Piazza Stesicoro and the Amphitheater area. From there, it keeps pulling you toward the food-focused corners of the city—bar counters, bakeries, kiosks, and market stalls—then ends with dessert.

What I like for planning is that you’re not only eating in random places. The route ties food to specific streets and landmarks, so you leave with a mental map of Catania, not just a stomach full of snacks.

If you’re someone who likes to eat, but also doesn’t want to spend the day constantly figuring out where to go next, this format works well. It’s also a good choice when you have limited time and still want a guided explanation of what you’re tasting.

You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Catania

Starting at Piazza Duomo: where the walking meal begins

Catania: Guided Street Food Tour with Tastings - Starting at Piazza Duomo: where the walking meal begins
You begin at the Cathedral in Piazza Duomo with a local guide. This is a smart first step because it gets you oriented right away in Catania’s center, so the rest of the route feels easier to follow later.

From there, the tour transitions into food. You don’t just drop straight into tasting; you get a short lead-in that helps you connect the sites you’re seeing with the city’s everyday food culture.

A small practical note: it’s a walking experience, and the schedule is set around tasting stops. Wear comfortable shoes—you’ll want them for the pace, even though the tour is only about three hours.

Fish market stop: fried fish and typical products

Catania: Guided Street Food Tour with Tastings - Fish market stop: fried fish and typical products
Next comes Catania’s fish market, where you taste typical products and (as the tour promises) the best fried fish in town. This is one of the core reasons to book: seafood in Sicily is a major deal, and the market setting makes it feel grounded, not staged.

Even if you’re not a huge seafood fan, it’s still a good moment to go. Fried fish is usually easy to sample in small portions, and you’ll get a sense of what’s local and in season based on what the market is offering.

The possible catch is simple: if you dislike fried foods or seafood, this stop may be less exciting for you. The good news is you’re not stuck on one theme for the whole tour; it switches from fish to streetside bakery and bar specialties pretty quickly after.

Via Crociferi and Via Etnea: sights you can connect to the bites

Catania: Guided Street Food Tour with Tastings - Via Crociferi and Via Etnea: sights you can connect to the bites
You’ll pass through Via Crociferi, a street famous for its churches, then continue along Via Etnea, Catania’s main street. Piazza Stesicoro and the Amphitheater sit nearby too, so you get a mix of architectural interest and high-visibility city life as the guide moves you between food stops.

Why this matters: when a food tour also shows you the streets where Catania’s daily rhythm happens, the tastings land differently. You start to understand where these foods fit into local life, not just what they are.

This section is also a good mental breather. You’re walking, you’re seeing key sights, and you’re not repeatedly eating at every corner. That pacing helps you enjoy what’s next, especially when you reach heavier dishes later.

Bar Savia arancini and Panetteria Pacini cipollina

Catania: Guided Street Food Tour with Tastings - Bar Savia arancini and Panetteria Pacini cipollina
Two stops that food lovers tend to talk about are Bar Savia for arancini and Panetteria Pacini for cipollina.

At Bar Savia, you’ll taste what’s described as the best arancini in town. Arancini are classic Sicilian street food: rice, usually with fillings, fried into a crisp outside. The tour’s advantage is that you’re not guessing where to start. You’re given a specific target with a reputation.

Then comes Panetteria Pacini and cipollina, described as a unique specialty of Catania cuisine. The word alone is a clue—it points to onion—and the value here is that you get something local that isn’t automatically obvious if you’re only familiar with broader Italian standards.

Practical takeaway: this is where the tour balances comfort food with “only-in-this-city” flavors. If you want your meal to feel like a proper cultural snapshot, these two tastings are doing a lot of work.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Catania

Chiosco Costa: Selz-and-syrup fizzy drink stop

After the foodier bites, the tour takes you to Chiosco Costa, Catania’s most important kiosk. Here, you’ll drink a typical Sicilian fizzy drink made with Selz and syrups.

This is a great palate reset between savory stops. It also gives you something to look forward to that isn’t another plate of fried food. The Selz-and-syrup style drink is distinctly Sicilian, and it’s one of those “small detail” tastings that makes a tour feel specific rather than generic.

If you’re sensitive to carbonation or you’re trying to keep sugary drinks to a minimum, you may want to treat this as a sip-and-enjoy moment rather than expecting it to be your only beverage. Soft drinks are included, but the tour’s focus stays on tastings.

By the harbor: horse meatballs and cipollata

Opposite the harbor, you reach the penultimate stop, and the menu gets more adventurous. You’ll enjoy a mixed meat dish including horse meatballs and Cipollata.

This is the place to go with an open mind. If you’re curious about how local Sicilian menus can include less common meats, this stop delivers that directly. If you already know you don’t eat horse meat, then this part may not match your preferences.

What I like about placing a heavier meat course near the end is timing. You’ve already eaten seafood and fried specialties, you’ve sampled the signature street snacks, and now you’re given one more “Catania-in-a-sentence” dish.

Since the tour includes tastings rather than a full sit-down meal, you can try it without committing to a huge portion. Still, the dish is part of the experience, so it’s worth weighing your comfort level in advance.

Dessert choices: cannolo, cassatella, almond paste, or granita

At the last stop, your dessert is reserved in advance. Depending on the time of year, you’ll get one of these Sicilian favorites: ricotta cannolo, cassatella and almond paste, or Sicilian granita.

This seasonal swap is practical. Granita in particular makes sense as weather changes, and it’s an easy dessert win because it doesn’t require heavy digestion after a day of savory tastings.

If you love classic ricotta cannoli, that’s a safe bet for the experience. If you’re more of a frozen-dessert person, you’ll hope for the granita option. Either way, the tour keeps dessert from feeling like an afterthought by planning it as the final stop.

The Elephant’s Way postcard: a souvenir that tracks your eating

You’ll conclude the guided street food discovery tour with a souvenir postcard called The Elephant’s Way. It’s marked with the stops and the different foods you tasted.

This might sound small, but it’s actually useful. When you get home and try to remember which bite you loved most, this postcard turns into a cheat sheet. It also makes the tour feel like a true route, not just separate snack stops.

If you like collecting food memories that you can share or use later to plan repeat visits, you’ll probably appreciate this one.

Price and value: is $80 a good deal?

At $80 per person for about three hours, the value comes from the combination. You’re paying for a local guide, a walking route through major areas of Catania, and a full set of tastings that covers fish, meat, multiple local specialties, and dessert.

This isn’t just “buy your own snacks and call it a tour.” The stops are specific: fish market fried fish, Bar Savia arancini, Panetteria Pacini cipollina, Chiosco Costa’s Selz-and-syrup drink, a harbor-area meat dish, and an ending dessert. You also get local soft drinks included.

So the cost makes sense if you want both sides: guided context plus multiple tastings without needing to build an itinerary yourself. If you’re already confident you’ll independently track down all these foods for a lower total price, you might not feel the need. But for most people short on time, $80 is a reasonable way to “eat through the city’s best-known targets” in a few hours.

One more practical note: gluten-free dishes aren’t available. If that affects you, the $80 value equation changes fast because you may not be able to eat enough of the tastings.

Who should book this Catania street food tour

You’ll likely enjoy this tour if you:

  • Want a guided walk that includes market food plus local counters
  • Like trying foods you can’t easily pick out on a menu
  • Have about three hours and want to cover multiple parts of Catania on foot
  • Are comfortable with fried foods and meat tastings

You might want to think twice if:

  • You need gluten-free options, since they’re not offered
  • You avoid horse meat, since the tour includes horse meatballs as part of the tasting lineup
  • You want a tour focused only on seafood or only on dessert, since the menu is intentionally varied

A few practical tips before you go

  • Tell the operator about allergies and intolerances when you book. The tour data makes it clear that you should specify needs up front.
  • Plan on walking and eating. This is a tasting tour, not a sit-down meal.
  • Pace your water or soft drink sips. The tastings stack up: fried fish, arancini, cipollina, then a meat dish, then dessert.
  • If you’re going in a season when granita is more likely, consider that as a lighter dessert option than ricotta-based cannolo.

Should you book this Catania street food tour?

Yes, if your goal is a high-effort flavor tour of Catania in a short time window, with a guide linking the tastings to recognizable city sights. The route hits major areas like Piazza Duomo, Via Crociferi, Via Etnea, and Piazza Stesicoro, then keeps you focused with targeted food stops like Bar Savia, Panetteria Pacini, and Chiosco Costa.

Skip it (or at least re-check your options) if gluten-free matters for you, because gluten-free dishes aren’t available. Also consider the harbor-area meat tasting if you have dietary restrictions around horse meat.

If those two points don’t block you, this looks like a solid $80 use of time: you get a compact route, multiple signature Catania foods, and dessert reserved at the end, capped off with a postcard you can use to remember the day.

FAQ

How long is the Catania guided street food tour?

The tour lasts 3 hours.

How much does the tour cost?

The price is $80 per person.

Where does the tour start?

It starts with a visit to the Cathedral in Piazza Duomo.

What foods and stops are included?

You’ll visit the fish market for typical products and fried fish, stop at Bar Savia for arancini, try cipollina at Panetteria Pacini, drink at Chiosco Costa, enjoy a mixed meat dish near the harbor, and finish with a reserved dessert (cannolo/cassatella and almond paste, or granita depending on the time of year).

Are soft drinks included?

Yes. Local soft drinks are included.

Is the tour guided?

Yes, you’ll be accompanied by a live local guide.

What languages are the tours in?

The tour guide speaks English and Italian.

Are gluten-free dishes available?

No, gluten-free dishes are not available.

What should I do if I have allergies or intolerances?

You should specify any allergies or intolerances when booking.

Is there free cancellation?

Yes, you can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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