What are the strangest Italian food festivals? Let’s discover together how crazy italians can be about food.
Over 20,000 food festivals every year!Italy is the country with the highest number of Sagre – so named in Italy – in the world.
This is partly due to its high territorial density, but also to the extraordinary variety of products and diverse traditions.
Why are they so weird?
Italian food festivals often originate from ancient agricultural and rural traditions, where the community celebrates a local product. Many are linked to religious or historical festivities, sometimes transformed into food and wine celebrations. As a result, local cultural identities — so specific that they may seem unusual to outsiders — are joyfully passed down through generations. In other words, they are not strange by accident, but because they reflect the authentic relationship between food, history, and community in Italy.

Here are the most famous festivals that you should attend at least once in your lifetime:
1. Marino (Rome – Lazio) – Sagra dell’Uva di Marino
One of the oldest and most famous food festivals in Italy: here grapes and wine are celebrated with a spectacular twist. Every first Sunday of October, the town’s fountains are replaced by flowing wine — a symbol that blends popular folklore, history, and conviviality. The event is officially documented and dates back to 1925.
👉 Strange because the fountains pour wine, not water!

2. Ivrea (Turin – Piedmont) – Battaglia delle Arance (Carnival of Ivrea)
Technically a carnival event, but also a gigantic food fight where teams throw oranges at each other in the historic city center. Originally symbolic, it is now one of the most incredible folkloric moments in Italy, with thousands of kilos of fruit thrown every year.
👉 Strange because people fight with oranges in the city for three days!

3. Camogli (Genoa – Liguria) – Sagra del Pesce
Every May, this small Ligurian village hosts a festival where the absolute star is fried fish served from a gigantic frying pan installed in the harbor — a symbol celebrating its maritime identity. It is an official event that attracts thousands of visitors.
👉 Strange because enormous quantities of fish are fried in one huge shared pan for everyone.

4. Sagra della Cipolla Rossa di Breme (Pavia – Lombardy) – Red Onion Festival
The red onion of Breme is a recognized DOP product, and every year this small Lombard village celebrates it. The Festival takes place usually in May, with dishes, markets, and tastings dedicated to this often underestimated ingredient.
👉 Strange because it proudly celebrates… the onion! And not just as a side dish.

5. Diamante (Cosenza – Calabria) – Peperoncino Festival
This regional festival in Calabria is more than a chili pepper fair. Featuring conferences, chili-eating competitions, exhibitions, and performances during a five-day event dedicated to spice, generally in September. The festival is so popular that it receives national media coverage.
👉 Strange because it celebrates… how much spice you can handle!

6. Bigolada di Castel d’Ario (Mantua – Lombardy) – Bigolada
Not a classic food festival but a popular gastronomic celebration with free distribution of bigoli pasta with sardines and wine. Born as an anti-Austrian protest in the 19th century, is nowadays a yearly traditional event. The event is officially De.C.O. (Municipal Designation of Origin) for its historical and cultural importance. It happen in February or March.
👉 Strange because it was born from a protest — and you eat a patriotic pasta shared by everyone.















