Three generations.
One living dough.
Every meal at Ftira begins with a culture that has never been refrigerated, never been restarted, and never left the island. What follows is the story of how it got here.
The grandmother had no recipe.
Carmela Farrugia woke before the sun to light the wood-fired oven in the back room of a stone house on the edge of a village nobody outside the island had heard of. She stretched ftira dough the way her mother had taught her — pressing the ring shape with her thumbs, never a rolling pin. The capers came from the wall outside. The olive oil arrived in a tin her husband carried from the Qormi market every Saturday.
Natural yeast passed down three generations — the same culture lives in our kitchen today.
1952 · Żebbuġ, Gozo
Sunday mornings belong to bread.
Her son Ġorġ set up a stall in Valletta's covered market, selling ftira wrapped in brown paper and tied with string. By eight in the morning the bread was gone. He added rabbit braised in red wine the way his mother made it every Sunday — slow, low, with bay leaves from the garden and a bottle of local Marsovin. People stood eating in the street. Nobody minded.
"You taste the whole island in one bite." — Ġorġ Farrugia, 1982 interview, Il-Ħelsien
1978 · Valletta Market
The door opened. The kitchen stayed.
Three generations later, the Farrugia family opened Ftira in a limestone building off a narrow Valletta side street — the kind of street where the walls are close enough to touch both sides at once. The wood-fired oven came from a bakery in Qormi that had been operating since 1901. Carmela's dough culture, kept alive in a ceramic bowl, moved with it. The menu changes with the season. The bread does not.
Ftira was listed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2021.
2019 · Triq San Duminku


