If you grew up in an Italian-American household, there's a good chance that fish was a big part of your Christmas Eve festivities. This custom, which is sometimes known as the Feast of Seven Fishes, is often believed to have been brought over from the old country. In all likelihood, however, the Feast of Seven Fishes might be as American as apple pie (assuming apple pie is actually an American dish).
So what exactly is the Feast of Seven Fishes, and how did it come to be associated with Italian-American Christmas Eve celebrations?
For starters, the Feast of Seven Fishes is a term that has become more common in recent years, but isn't a codified tradition in Italy or even in Italian-American families. In researching this article, we found no formal definitions for the Feast and almost no one agrees on which seven fishes should actually be included. (The phrase, Feast of Seven Fishes is neither a term the Catholic church uses, nor is it a recognized Feast.)
At a recent meeting of our Italian Research Group, the gathered members all agreed that baccalà (salted cod) and calamari should be part of the Christmas Eve dinner but, beyond those two dishes, everyone had their own version of the Seven Fishes—and none of them referred to it as the Feast of Seven Fishes. Some families in the group serve classic American shrimp cocktails along with other fish dishes; others stick to traditional Italian; and still others from 100% Italian-American households consume 0% fish on Christmas Eve.
The Origins of the Fish Dinner
So if there aren't seven official fish dishes for Christmas Eve, why do people call it the Feast of Seven Fishes, and why is fish part of it? The answer to the former question is one that few can seem to agree on, although plenty of theories exist.
Many Italians and their American offspring are Roman Catholics, and Roman Catholics traditionally fast before receiving Communion, especially on Feast Days. (This form of fasting involves an abstinence from meat, but not fish.) Since Christmas Eve is the lead-up to the Feast of the Nativity and many Catholics attend Midnight Mass on Christmas, the fish portion of the feast is pretty easy to explain...but that's where things start getting murky.
There is no such thing as the Feast of Seven Fishes on the Roman Catholic calendar. There never has been an official feast with this name in Italy or the United States. In fact, most sources agree that serving fish on Christmas Eve is mainly practiced by Southern Italians, when it's practiced at all.
This actually makes sense as baccalà is a relatively affordable fish that Southern Italians, many of whom were peasants, would have been able to include in holiday meals. It would also make sense that these same Italians brought this tradition with them when they immigrated to the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
That leaves the question of where the seven fishes come from and what they symbolize.
As near as we can tell, no one really knows.
Our Western History Subject Index doesn't include any mention of the feast, except for a series of recipes that ran in the Rocky Mountain News in 2008. Nor is the feast mentioned in the 2008 book, Italy in Colorado: Family Histories from Denver and Beyond.
The earliest mention of the feast in the New York Times dates only back to 1987, and even that article contains only anecdotal evidence that the tradition was born in the U.S. Subsequent references to the Feast in the Paper of Record refer only to recipe books and menus. None of these articles contain much in the way of where the seven fishes came from.
In fact, a Google search for the Feast suggests that the term has been used more frequently in recent years than in years past, especially on news sites. A similar dynamic holds true when searching newspaper and magazine databases.
A 2008 article in the New York Times by Maria Laurino titled, "In 7 Fish (More or Less), a Holiday Tradition," lays out plenty of theories as to what the seven fish stand for; the seven sacraments of the Catholic church; seven hills of Rome; the seven deadly sins (though that's not very Christmas-y at all), but steers clear of drawing any conclusions.
On Wikipedia, an anonymous author postulates that seven is the number that appears most frequently in the Bible, but that theory didn't hit home with our Italian Research Group. Very few of them could remember their Catholic parents and grandparents ever reading the Bible, let alone counting the number of times certain numbers appeared in it.
The Bottom Line
Unearthing the origin and meaning of the Feast of the Seven Fishes, it turns out, is something of a fool's errand.
It seems clear that this tradition, like most traditions, varies greatly from region to region and from family to family. As is also the case with most holiday celebrations, there's really no right or wrong way to do the Feast. In fact, some Italian American families only celebrate three fishes while others (gasp) serve lamb or roast beef on Christmas Eve.
What really matters is the time families spend preparing and consuming their traditional meals during the holidays. Several of our Italian researchers mentioned spending several days preparing stuffed calamari and other fish dishes as a group project. And in an age when families are scattered and traditions are frequently overlooked entirely, that sounds like a pretty good way to spend a holiday, no matter where your ancestors came from.
Are you interested in learning more about your Italian-American ancestry? Join us for our Italian Research Group on the first Wednesday of each month from 10 a.m.-noon in the 10th Mountain Division Room of the Western History and Genealogy Department on Level 5 of the Central Library.
Comments
Italians are not the only
Italians are not the only group that feasts on fish for Christmas Eve. Portuguese and Greeks do as well. Many Mediterranean countries do this. Portuguese eat fish on Christmas Eve, as my mother told us, because the farm animals kept Jesus Christ warm in the manager. So we do not eat beef, lamb, or pork or any mammals on these days.
HI Nancy - Thanks for sharing
HI Nancy - Thanks for sharing that with us. I think that there are probably a lot of reasons for the feast that grew over time and developed regionally. (And I also think this one is as good as any I've heard!)
My mother's family was from
My mother's family was from southern Italy. She never heard of it either although baccala was served Christmas Eve and at any other time you felt like it. But there was also sausage, lasagna, meatballs, antipasto and lots of Italian bread and wine.
Hi Linda - I think that's the
Hi Linda - I think that's the general consensus. Fish was part of the celebration but somewhere after the journey to America, it became the star of the show!
Thank you for a fun and
Thank you for a fun and informative article. I'd like to add a reference to the dialogue. The December 19, 2021 Phila. Inquired made more the the first reference to the feast was an Inquirer article from 1983 about the La Buca restaurant take on the feast.
Although my husband's paternal grandparents lived in Phila. he doesn't recall every celebrating this.
Thank you again. Happy Christmas.
I
I'm certain that no such
I'm certain that no such feast exists. It was probably hype made up by cable TV producers to boost viewers. Similar to the way today there are all kinds of over-the-top descriptions for phases of the moon, e.g. super moon, blood moon, hunter's moon, etc. Nothing but hype that gets eyeballs and clicks in the age of internet. Feast of the Seven Fishes comes out the same hype machine. I grew up in an Italian American household and never heard of it until well into adulthood. And when I first heard it, it was on, guess where? Cable TV food shows.
Hi Bizo - Thanks for reading
Hi Bizo - Thanks for reading and commenting. You're right on point. Plenty of Italian-American households enjoyed decades of Christmas Eve fish dinners without ever having heard of the Feast of the Seven Fishes. Happy New Year!
Fasting before Communion…
Fasting before Communion includes everything except water. It was once after midnight then modified to Three hours prior to receiving. It is now one hour prior.
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