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PhrasesAt the RestaurantÈ fresco il pesce oggi?
A2

È fresco il pesce oggi?

Is the fish fresh today?

Pronunciation

PE-sce — two syllables, 'sc' before 'e' is like 'sh'. Stress on the first syllable.

When to use it

Before ordering fish or seafood, especially at inland restaurants where freshness can vary depending on the day's delivery.

What it means

'Fresco' means fresh. Italian law requires restaurants to declare whether fish is fresh or frozen ('decongelato') on the menu. However, asking directly is still the most reliable way to get honest information.

Variations

Il pesce è fresco o surgelato?

Is the fish fresh or frozen?

More specific — distinguishes between fresh and frozen

Cosa c'è di fresco oggi?

What is fresh today?

Open-ended — lets the waiter tell you what just arrived

Il branzino è di giornata?

Is the sea bass today's catch?

'Di giornata' (of the day) — Italian term for freshly delivered that day

Mini Dialogue

— È fresco il pesce oggi? — Sì, è arrivato stamattina dal mercato di Rialto. Il branzino e le orate sono bellissimi. — Prendo il branzino allora. — Ottima scelta! Lo vuole al forno o alla griglia?

— Is the fish fresh today? — Yes, it arrived this morning from the Rialto market. The sea bass and the gilt-head bream are excellent. — I'll have the sea bass then. — Excellent choice! Would you like it baked or grilled?

Cultural Note

Italian law (D.Lgs. 231/2017) requires menus to indicate whether fish has been frozen. The term 'decongelato' (defrosted) must appear next to frozen fish. 'Di giornata' or 'fresco' without qualifiers means it arrived that day.