Food: It's about places and people Vol 1.

What makes food special is not only the food itself. 
We seldom realize that what lets us form irreplaceable memories about food, and experience a sensation that most of the time defies the power of descriptive language, is actually the PEOPLE we share the food with and THE PLACE where that sharing happens. 
Lots have been written about this,  but one thing is clear:
The context around your meal is half the meal itself. 
In the Summer of 2009, I went back to Istanbul again to visit family, eat, eat, and eat some more. 

My brother and I stopped by my granduncle Yilmaz's house. He is an accomplished and respected violin player, with great knowledge of Turkish classical music, and of course a gourmand of the old days. 
Our cousin Sehnaz also stopped by. This place is familiar: they have been living at this place for over twenty years, and every time we visit, the feeling is more than just familiar; it is a part of who we are, with every moment predictable, yet enjoyable. 
Our aunt Sena starts our (what she calls) impromptu dinner with "Su Boregi," layers upon layer of hand rolled thin sheets of dough boiled in water, and then put together layer upon layer with liberal amounts of butter, eggwash, traditional turkish white cheese (beyaz peynir), and parsley, all then baked in a large pan until golden brown. 
Cacik is also served - a sort of a thick yogurt soup made with shredded cucumbers, mint, bit of chopped dill, and lots of drizzled olive oil. Cacik, Tzatziki, tzadziki, tsatsiki, or ttalattouri, whatever you want to call it depending on your location, this is one of the best things you can eat on a hot summer day. 
"Kisir" makes an appearance. Thin cut bulgur wheat, cooked, then mixed with scallions, (sometimes thinly cut red onions), parsley, red hot pepper flakes, tomato paste, cumin, and most importantly pomegranate molasses. An effort to establish a nationally accepted recipe for Kisir (like any other multi-regionally-shared-dish) can start civil wars, so I will disclaim that this is my aunt's version and no one else's!
Next she brings out Zeytinyagli Dolma, green peppers stuffed with rice flavored with cinnamon, black pepper and currants, and capped with chunks of tomatoes to seal in the filling, then cooked on low heat. I like to eat them cold, straight our of the fridge. Good olive oil is a must. 
Then, aunt Sena shows up with a big pot, puts a big plate on it, and turns it upside down. This is what comes out. 
Sena, a master in Arab influenced cooking, reveals her braised, cotton-soft chunks of fatty lamb bits with fried eggplant, almonds and pine nuts cooked with a rice pilav flavored with caramelized onions and butter. This 'heavy-hitter' has so many layers of flavor, with the gamey lamb to the smoky eggplant to the sweet bit of caramelized onions.. This dish probably requires timing skills of a most advanced cook, with all of the ingredients having to be perfectly cooked, and work together. Sena is a true master in the kitchen, and her familial background show up in every dish that she makes for us..
We try every single dish, and I can't even go on to show the desert and fruit plate we had afterwards with Turkish coffee.  Still conscious after all the drooling? Read on. 
One of our 'traditional' family dinners at my grandmother's house. The table, the lighting, the furniture, the silverware, everything, and i mean EVERYTHING is not only familiar, but also comforting in a way that says "You are home. You will have a good meal." The sweet smell of day-long cooking permeates every room in the house. 
We start with an incredible red lentil soup. The butter and onion based soup is also enriched with a little bit of garlic for flavor, and just the tiniest bit of cornmeal for texture. Topped with chili infused melted butter and croutons made from yesterday's stale bread, this is an experience in itself. 
Fava beans cooked in olive oil and topped with dill...
And lima beans cook with tomatoes, Barbunya Fasulyesi, onions and carrots topped with parsley continue the meal...
This being the month of Ramadan at the time, the traditional 'Ramazan Pidesi' replaces the regular loaf of bread in most Turkish homes. It's slightly sweeter, airier, and has a nice wood-oven-baked smokiness. 
As a side salad we had a traditional purslane green salad, which is simply purslane green leafs dressed with olive oil and thick strained yogurt. This is a dish that I loved and hated over many years, and I am still undecided about it. You definitely have to be in the mood for it. 
And the plate is completed by "Kadinbudu Kofte," a very special meat patty made with beef, lamb, and rice, and then coated with eggwash and pan fried in hot oil. Very few things give me the comfort that Kadinbudu does, down to the slight crunch the fried egg gives out at the moment of the 'first dig.'
Two days later I flew to southern Turkish 'resort-town,' Bodrum. My friend Erinç...
...and I stopped at our regular restaurant right at the heart of the most touristic town square - Nazilli Pidecisi. The location is so familiar to us after having come here for the past ten years of our lives at least once a year (almost), the 'rinky-dink' feel of the place only add to our collective self-assurance that it has not changed a bit; decor, food, or otherwise. You literally sit in the middle of the square, with by-passers enviously gazing over your food.
Pide is a variation on a wood-oven baked open faced bread usually stuffed  with lamb meat, cheese and more popularly in the Aegian / Mediterranean regions, with braised local greens, and then finished with a raw cracked egg on top (which then cooks with the heat of the Pide as it's being brought to your table.)
This is the version with the spiced lamb meat, with the yogurt drink "Ayran," not unlike the Indian salty lassie, served in hand-hammered copper cups. 
The meal is finished with one of the best things i've ever eaten. (no kidding.) It's a freshly baked, thin pie smeared thick with a tahini paste and sugar, which is then topped with chopped walnut and hazelnuts. The gooey, melting tahini permeates into the crunch of the crust down below, and the caramelized sugar puts this 'thing' into a whole new league where only the most visceral, primal, and unpretentious of foods can compete in. Molecular gastronomy? Raw movement? Pan-american interpretations of French classics? GET OUTTA HERE!

Coming up next post in Vol.2: Some incredible regional cooking in southwestern Turkey shared with friends in the middle of the sea!

Meanwhile, any comments are welcome!
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Filed under  //   Barbunya   Cacik   Dolma   food blog   Kadinbudu   Kisir   Patlicanli Pilav   Pide   Su Boregi   Tahinli Pide   Turkish Food  

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Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Turkey, Winter 2007 Part 1

(Almost) Everything I ate in Istanbul - Winter 2007 - Part 1

Re-visiting my Winter 2007 food journey to Istanbul, here on Posterous. Be sure to check out all parts. Enjoy:



First breakfast in Istanbul. This famous little cafe located right along the Bosporus...




..next to the Bebek Mosque called Bebek Cafe is famous for.. well.. just being a cafe. At a time when coffee houses boast on about their smoked salmon salads and duck confit, this landmark shop has been known to serve the bare minimum of turkish black tea, turkish coffee, sage tea and a couple of pastry items, and do it really well. Here, it's easy to spot some celebrities sip tea next to any Joe Schmoe.



I start my day with some Pogaca, a savory pastry filled with feta cheese and covered with toasted sesame seeds. It's crusty outside and soft and buttery inside.



Of course hot, tart black tea is the best accompaniment.



That night I visit "Dukkan", which is known to be one of the best steak houses (if not the best) located in one of the worst slums located in the European side of the city, Kucuk Armutlu. The concept is genius: This is a butcher shop where you can pick your meat and have it simply grilled and have it inside the shop with a giant bowl of salad and some Argentinian wine. The owner, Emre Mermerci, is known to have traveled and lived in the US and Argentina for years to learn the best tricks about a proper steak.



...and smoked beef proscuitto.



Here we see a medium-rare Ribeye in close action..



...and his beef aging quarters are impressive as well.



That same night we skip dessert and decided to head down to what I consider the best of what might be translated as a 'pudding house'. This concept of "Muhallebici" is one of those great traditions most Turkish people take for granted. This is where some great traditional Turkish desserts are served until late night (well into the morning) and some simple dishes such as Pilav with roast chicken and chicken noodle soup are also served. (We had a sampling of both before our desserts. We decide to share "Keskul", a traditional pudding made out of an almond base and milk. It's fragrant, rich and often topped with ground pistachios and coconut. If you're a metabolism-punishing freak, or a suicidal diabetic, you can also add a scoop of sweet cream ice cream on top. (we did.) The rest of the different desserts are too many to go into detail here, but I can tell you that one pudding includes strands of chicken breast as the main ingredient, and another is enjoyed with spoonfuls of rose water. An adventurous bunch of late night eaters are these Turks.



A couple of days later we make a trip to Konyali, which is one of the best traditional Turkish / Ottoman kitchens in Istanbul. It's somewhat pricey, but the extensive menu of Otto-Turko specialties remain the same as they were 60 years ago in this establishment.



Fresh 'pide' bread (yeastless puffy bread) is served with some rosemary-marinated olives and light olive oil whether you want it or not.



We order some Turkish appetizer classics: "Arnavut Cigeri,"



chunks of lamb's liver covered with flour, salt and pepper and then flash fried, then traditionally served with red onions marinated with sumac and parsley.




We also get Fennel Root braised with chunks of lamb and dill.
When eaten slightly warm, this is heaven with a river of olive oil running through it.




We of course had to try "Ic Pilavi," which has hundreds of variations in Turkey, but all symbolize abundance and festivity. It is a pilaf heavily spiced with black pepper and cinnamon, which then is slightly sweetened with caramelized onions, raisins and pinenuts. It's rich, heavy, and.. just plain GOOD. Most versions also include at least five different kinds of meat not excluding chicken liver, rooster and turkey.



My main dish arrives: Hunkar Begendi.



It is a traditional ottoman dish which consists of roasted eggplants cooked with butter, aged cheeses and black pepper, and then topped with braised lamb stew. Some sort of lamb gravy tops this dish although my grandmother would disagree with that particular addition. If you could have this for breakfast, you would save two meals' worth of money. You could imagine why.



We finish our modest meal with some truly amazing turkish coffee, served with plain turkish delight in a thick brass cup . This particular cup of turkish coffee was one of the best i've ever had, complete with espresso-like tiger stripes and 'telve,' powder-fine coffee grounds hitting your tongue every sip. If drip were wind-powered, this cup was nuclear.

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Filed under  //   bebek   cay   dukkan   food essay   food journey   grand bazaar   istanbul   konyali   saray muhallebicisi   street food   turkey   turkish food  

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Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Turkey, Winter 2007 Part 2

Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Turkey, Winter 2007 Part 2

(Almost) Everything I ate in Istanbul - Winter 2007 - Part 2


Lunch at grandmother's: She starts us off with some red lentil soup. I think it's enriched with some polenta and of course, butter, so half a cup is already a substantial start. I add a good deal of hot pepper flakes.

Fava: A simple, yet a-hard-to-get-it-right sort of dish that is made with pureed fava beans, lots of olive oil and dill.

It's dense and very creamy.

Roughly chopped shepher's salad,

followed by olive-oil braised artichoke hearts.

Pre-empting the possibility that we might be sinning if the main dish didn't include some sort of meat, we dig into this version of Orman Kebabi,

which is chunks of tender lamb roasted with caramelized pearl onions, tomato, button mushrooms and then topped with aged cheese and lots of oregano. Did I mention...

that this was also served with some tomato-rice pilaf?)

AND some braised vegetable medley"?

A few days later I visited one of my favorite bakery / coffee shops in Istanbul with my friend Ali Riza, and his girlfriend Itir. The shop is called Beyaz Firin (White Oven). It's a bakery with overwhelming choice where you can order it off the shelf and have yourself a 3000 calorie breakfast almost instantly.

We shared: Roasted Egglplant and chicken quiche,

Pogaca with Dill (A pouch-like pastry filled with local feta cheese),

and a "mini-kol-boregi" Which is a personal-sized flake-pastry-pie filled with ground meat and onions and then topped with sesame seeds. I think the amount of butter that goes into making one of these is kept secret. It's better that way.


We finished our breakfast off with some almond and pistachio cookies

and of course,

...tea.

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Filed under  //   bebek   beyaz firin   cay   dukkan   food essay   food journey   grand bazaar   istanbul   konyali   saray muhallebicisi   street food   turkey   turkish food  

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Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Turkey, Winter 2007 Part 3

Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Turkey, Winter 2007 Part 3

(Almost) Everything I ate in Istanbul - Winter 2007 - Part 3


A day later I found myself waiting for a friend in the damp cold of Taksim. When I realized I was next to one of my favorite restaurants from my childhood, "KONAK", I decided to get..


..some Lahmacun to go. It's officially one of my favorite things to eat: Almost wafer thin crust topped with onions, minced lamb meat, tomatoes and pepper flakes and parsley, which is then flash-baked in a coal oven. I finished this particular one in under 32 seconds.


That same night my friend Ali promises me some amazing culinary experience and takes me to the backstreets of Taksim to find this hole-in-the-wall restaurant called 'Umut Ocakbasi".


"Ocakbasi" is a certain kind of kebab-house where you can sit right in front of the grill where they prepare all the dishes AND have a nice chat with the 'grillmaster' . It's kind of like a Japanese Hibachi grill experience, except it's more of a 'working-man's-feast' sort of a setting.
The decor sublime in its rinkydinkycité.


The grillmaster exudes..umm... grilling mastery...


ome 'mezes' arrive without us asking for them, always a good sign. The fluorescent lighting fails to make the food look bad.


Creamy feta cheese with cucumbers and tomatoes,


Chopped, coal-roasted onions topped with olive oil and hot peppers,


Fire-roasted eggplant salad,


Cacik (thick yogurt, cucumbers, and lots of mint),


Onion salad with sumac and parsley,


And "Ezme", which is a freshly made tomato paste with onions, parsley and olive oil


Cop sis arrives.


It's small bits of lamb chunks skewered with giant metal rods and quickly grilled for a minute and traditionally eaten with lavash bread and lots of cumin. A few rods are also supposed to feature chunks of lamb liver, but our waiter informed us that we were too late for that days fresh delivery of liver.


We finish the meal off with Adana kebap. Knife-minced sheep meat is spiced with peppers and quickly grilled over charcoal. The smoky gamey goodness of this classic dish is unexplainable in words, on a blog, facebook, or anywhere else where you're not actually eating this thing.


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Filed under  //   bebek   beyaz firin   cay   dukkan   food essay   food journey   grand bazaar   istanbul   kebab   kebap   konak   konyali   lahmacun   ocakbasi   saray muhallebicisi   street food   turkey   turkish food  

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Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Turkey, Winter 2007 Part 4

Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Turkey, Winter 2007 Part 4 (Almost) Everything I ate in Istanbul - Winter 2007 - Part 4


Next day, more meat. This is the FIRST establishment I can remember visiting as a child with my mother and my grandmother...


It's amazing to see that the simple combination of grilled meatballs...


...


...Piyaz (white bean salad with onions, lettuce and carrots dressed with oilve oil and vinegar) ...


and Ayran, the creamy yogurt drink not unlike a salty-lassi...


..has not changed since the first day I visited there as a 4 year old.
Of course the lack of anything interesting to look at in the interior only makes me love this kofte-shop even more.


A day later my family and I were invited to our old family friends' house for dinner. It was designed as an early new-years dinner, so the menu was conducive to long hours of eating, drinking and chatting.

Stuffed grape leaves,...


...home made hummus drizzled with melted, peppered butter...



...Another recipe for "Fava"...


...this time topped with red onions and parsley...


Just as we thought we were done eating, our host Afife whips out this giant roasted turkey..


..and serves it with almond-pilav and a ..


..."I-ve-never-eaten-anything-like-this" good chutney made with onions, raisins and dates...



As we approach the sub-35bpm heartrates, we finish the meal off with perhaps one of the most traditional Turkish desserts called "Asure". I have seen so many variations that to this day I am not sure about what it is at this point, but it tends to have a pretty thick pudding component that is then topped with all kinds of grains, nuts, fresh fruits, candied fruits and spices. Ever wonder how Sultans kept their Harems in check? This is it.

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Filed under  //   bebek   besiktas koftecisi   beyaz firin   cay   dukkan   food essay   food journey   grand bazaar   istanbul   kebab   kebap   konak   konyali   lahmacun   ocakbasi   saray muhallebicisi   street food   turkey   turkish food  

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Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Turkey, Winter 2007 Part 5

Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Turkey, Winter 2007 Part 5

(Almost) Everything I ate in Istanbul - Winter 2007 - Part 5


A couple of days later, having skipped breakfast (not intentionally) I decided to go to this shop that i've been meaning to visit for a couple of years now. It's a kind of rinky-dink cafe that is famous for its "Doner,". Doner is hundreds of layers of lamb meat fire-roasted and thinly sliced in leaves as it grills crispy outside. Yes, it is like a Gyro, yet is is NOTHING like a Gyro. Gyro is poison. Doner, my friends, is the culinary pinnacle of meat preparation.


We order it over rice, topped it with hot pepper flakes, and the shop makes us happy with a full complimentary plate of pickled cucumbers, and tomatoes. Freshly baked bread accompanies.


During our half day excursion into the old city with our dear family friend Barbaros, A.K.A. Abudis, (a separate visual essay of this excursion should be available here soon) we let him lead us into culinary bliss with his deep knowledge of the city.



He stops a street vendor and gets us a couple of 'simit'. It's the traditional turkish pretzel made with yeast-less dough covered with toasted sesame seeds and baked in a stone oven. It is THE quintessential street food in Istanbul, and Barbaros manages to find the most amazing one i've ever had.

The vendor tells me that he's been baking his own simit with the same recipe since 1974. I briefly want him to be my brother.


It's crusty on the outside and chewy on the inside.


Barbaros then takes us to his 'secret' shop near the Grand Bazaar where all kinds of hard-to-find Turkish foods can be found. He promises us to find the best PASTIRMA we ever had.


Pastirma is an expensive loin of lamb covered with a spice-paste of garlic, paprika, and some other unknown spices known as Cemen, and then dry-cured by hanging. It is somewhat similar to breasola, yet again, Breasola is no Pastirma.


See that chunk of fat that marbles the loin?


It instantly melts away as it touches your mouth .


...


On our way, we come across a vendor selling roasted chestnuts.


We try a few.


Before our gastronomical finale of the day, we decide to take a tea break. Both my brother and Barbaros confirm from experience that this is the best tea you can get around the old city.


And here it is: KOKOREC


Even though i have written about this peculiar yet delicious street food in another album, experiencing it this time at this particular shop made me realize how little i knew about good kokorec .


To recap: Kokorec is cleaned lamb intestines rolled around a rod, slowly charcoal roasted


and than chopped to order with pepper flakes, lots of salt and oregano


and than chopped to order with pepper flakes, lots of salt and oregano


...

...

...

and then served inside a quarter loaf of crusty turkish bread.

...

This particular shop named "imparator" (translated: Emperor) makes the best kokorec...


...and one little trick i learned while i was watching the guy roast is that every few minutes the coal fire is sprinkled with pinches of oregano so the oregano smoke permeates the meat. That, my friends, could be the meaning of life for that particular moment. ( and i am pretty sure it was). Bourdain would pay me to smell my breath at this point.



No trip is finished without dessert, so my brother and I visit this little sweets-shop that i've been wanting to visit for a while.


It's a tiny shop where they've been making only a few classic turkish desserts...



...since 1963.


I try "Sobiyet",


...a dessert similar to Baklava except it's a little lighter, more elongated but has a somewhat creamier feel than Baklava.


After a few days of mediocre eating, we pick it up again:
We have breakfast at "Kale" (means 'castle'), which is located along the Bosporus, right under the Rumeli Hisari, the fortress Fatih the Conqueror built during the siege of Constantinople in 1450 in a matter of weeks.


A big basket of cookies, rolls, and breads arrives.


I choose to go with the traditional egg dish named "Menemen" . I decide to have the simplest version made with eggs, tomatoes and green peppers.


Cig Borek: A large puff pastry filled with ground beef, and then flash fried until the meat is brown.


The next day we visit the ever-so-popular cafe in Bebek named Lucca, and had a late lunch:

We collectively shared a smoked salmon salad,


filet-mignon with melted blue cheese potato gratin,


and papardelle with braised duck ragu.


That night, the sweet tooth was in effect, so we went to Brasserie Burc, which is home to some of the best profiterole in existence. And then of course tea, tea and more tea.

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Filed under  //   baklava   bebek   besiktas koftecisi   beyaz firin   cay   doner   dukkan   food essay   food journey   grand bazaar   istanbul   kafadaroglu   kebab   kebap   kestane   kestane kebap   kokores   konak   konyali   lahmacun   ocakbasi   pastirma   roasted chestnuts   saray muhallebicisi   simit   spice   street food   turkey   turkish food   turkish spice  

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Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Street Edition, Turkey

I have been documenting my food-related experiences during my visits to Turkey for the past 3 years, 
and finally I was able to publish these in a visual-essay format.. Enjoy:

Glorious Gourmet Gluttony - Street Edition, Turkey

Here we go again.

I start my trip with something I had been craving since I had landed in Istanbul: Doner. Traditionally large, thin layers of lamb and beef are skewered on a giant rod, and roasted vertically over charcoal fire. This version is served inside a pide, a puffy, yeastless, oven-baked bread, with slices of tomato and pickles as garnish. And remember: NO SAUCE. Thousand years of culinary progress brought this meat to its naked perfection. It does not need SAUCE.

Next day a few old friends and I decide to do some late night eating. These 'bufe's offer near-24 hour street food eating convenience in Istanbul. Although their menus have gotten a bit convoluted with different items trying to please everyone's palates, it's still good, round the clock eating..

My friend Mert and I share a midye tava sandwich, deep-fried mussels dressed with a creamy garlic sauce and served inside a crusty quarter loaf of bread. Most people will not eat mussels around Istanbul, because of its reported high mercury content. I, my friends, proclaim that the best mussel is still served in Istanbul, and until the government or my melting brain stops me, I'll be enjoying these tasty bivalve molluscs..

..'community' hot peppers to put on whatever. Similar to banana peppers, except a bit hotter..

Translation: French Fries. 1 portion: 3 YTL, inside half loaf of bread: 2.5YTL. ... and NO, a plate full of frites stuffed inside half loaf of bread is NOT traditional turkish food, and i doubt it's traditional ANYTHING.

A day later, another street food classic in Turkey: Buttery white rice pilav with chickpeas, topped with shredded roasted chicken pieces. Later I found out that this 'meat-over-rice-pilaf' combination was the very first traditional and indigenous dish from the early Ottoman cuisine. Pretty much everything else was added later on by other cultures the empire contained. Ayran, the traditional salty yogurt drink accompanies.

A visit to the restauran "Sofyali," which is famous for its small plate 'mezes'.

Fava bean puree with olive oil and dill (Left), and 'pasa mezesi,' a combination of feta cheese, chopped walnuts, and roasted peppers. "Pasa mezesi" translates to 'General's Meze," which shows a strange Turkish preoccupation / belief that if a high-ranking military official likes to eat something, it has got to be good.

Fresh "ezme," finely chopped tomatoes, hot peppers and onions, topped with olive oil and pepper flakes. On the right, "Deniz Borulcesi," a salad whose main ingredient is a kind of sea weed that grows wild in the Mediteranean. It tastes like the sea and is delicious.

Otlu Peynir (mix of blended cheeses with fresh herbs), and Hummus.

..of course accompanied by Raki, the anise seed flavored grape alcohol.

..arugula salad with tomatoes. which reminds me.. not to get eastern-euro-centric on anyone, but what most people eat in the United States as tomatoes are NOT tomatoes. Compared to these counterparts, they are round little red balls filled with sand and slime. These tomatoes have the ability to overwhelm your senses with flavor.

.. the name of this pastry escapes me, but I remember it being flakey, cheese, not unlike the Brazilian cheese biscuits (Pao de Queijo). Except they're better because they're Turkish. :)

...The next day I have a 'date'. A date with perhaps my favorite thing to eat, EVER: Lahmacun. When asked 'well-done', these crispy, thin-crust pastries topped with finely minced lamb meat, onions and spices become my favorite nap-inducing dish ever. It's traditionally served with stems of parsley, sumac marinated red onions and a slice of lemon.

A simple "Domatezli Kebap". Chunks of the same lamb meat skewered along with the same incredible tomatoes i talked about, and served with bulgur wheat pilav, more parsley, lettuce, grilled hot green peppers, and...

...lavash bread smeared with the kebap's drippings and red pepper flakes.

.. which then can only be properly washed down by tart black tea and.. well.. backgammon.

...a few days later on Istiklal Caddesi (perhaps Istanbul's busiest street), I find another one of my favorite things being sold on the street by a vendor...

...who has been selling these deep fried balls of bulgur wheat filled with minced lamb meat, walnuts, parsley, and red pepper flakes since the early 70's. This was the best one i have ever had. Slightly warm, with some melt-in-your-mouth action.

..we pass by a street vendor selling 'Kavurma," which is that conical hunk of meat conisting chunks of sheep meat (all parts, all kinds) and fat. It's then rendered down on a grill either by itself or with tomatoes and green peppers.

..another street vendor selling charcoal-roasted corn on the cob.. Again, no sauce, no cheese, nobutter. Only the now-heightened-by-coal-fire flavors of the corn itself..

That night I tried something that I had been curious about since childhood: Buzda badem.(Literally : almonds on ice)

Usually in places where there is a lot of restaurant traffic, these traveling salesmen walk aroundwith a tray of fresh, chilled almonds sitting on ice. Later I was informed that they are knownto be one of the best accompaniements to Raki during long dinners with lots of drinking and conversation.

When we were done with our meal, we ran into this advertising sign for a bar, which reads (when translated from slang to slang) : "Hold off dude, let's get a mojito."

That same night witnessed the carefree guzzling of lots of different kinds of alcohol, which impaired judgement, which in turn resulted in the carefree post-drunkeness consumption of this street food: the ISLAK (wet) BURGER. Now this might not look all that intimidating, but it is pretty much agreed even among most adventurous eaters that this is one of the sketchiest, and most risky street foods you can consume: Inside a burger bun, an unknown mixture of ground meats and spices are SMEARED RAW, and then grilled inside a panini press. The whole thing is then basted with deluded tomato paste. No one knows where the meat comes from, and the meat mixture has been reported by my dear friend Eren as being transported in a container that used to contain silicate / plaster sealant for heavy construction. How's it taste? Delicious.

..only heavy Ayran can offset the construction residue..

...aaand next morning we fly to southwestern Turkey, Izmir. On our way to the town of Alacati, we stop at Urla. A little bit of questioning of locals about where to eat leads us to this small 'fish house' at the town square. One of the local fishermen's wife runs this little shop where you get to have all the fresh catches of the day, simply prepared for cheap..

First the Borulce Salad (the same sea weed salad we had at Sofyali, except WAY better and fresher here).

..roasted eggplant salad.. with nothing but a little bit of extra virgin olive oil and salt..

..fresh sardines marinated in lemon juice and rolled inside peppered olive oil..

and the glorious MIDYE DOLMA (stuffed mussels,) which the fisherman's wife had prepared 10 minutes ago before we arrived. In this CLASSIC, spiced rice (lots of black pepper) is stuffed into roasted mussels one by one and put back in the shells. With a drop of lemon juice this is seafood crack.

..we also tasted some things that I never had before, like this dish called "Subye Yumurtasi". We learn that it is Squid roe, simply pan fried with butter and pepper flakes. The giant-maggot-like appearance might be unappetizing, but it was buttery in texture, and surprisingly mild in term of fishiness.

Here it is: The BEST Octopus i have ever had. Fresh off the boat, the octopus legs are first grilled over charcoal and then quickly tossed in a pan with LOTS of butter. Result: the tenderest, tastiest squid I ever had.

..a local fish called 'Patlak Goz' (Blown Eye) for it's large size eyes, simply grilled.

..and also tekir (baby red snapper, i believe)..

..next day in Alacati we are treated to Mucver, a balkan classic, which are incredibly tasty fritters made from shredded zucchini, mint and dill. Garlic yogurt with toasted pinenuts accompany.

..as the main course i decide to go light (!) and order the mackarel salad...

The next night, we arrive in Ciftlikkoy, which is home to a very old fish restaurant called Langusta, which actually takes its name from the kind of shellfish it traditionally serves. The octopus salad is seen here, with bits of parsley and pepper flakes.

a traditional greek meze. I believe the name is Niko, with a pickled pepper paste..

roasted peppers in yogurt sauce, topped with deep-green olive oil..

and this local sheep's milk cheese that stank up the whole restaurant. Even though it was a fairly young cheese, the fact that it was aged inside a 'bag' made of a skinned coat of a goat made it stink to high heavens. Yum : I
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Filed under  //   Food   Food Diary   Gourmet   Istanbul   Turkey   Turkish Food  

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About

Hello.

This is where I and a few good friends explore the opposite ends of the spectrum of the experience of food.

'Eat and Let Live' is the 'light' side. Culture, heritage, history of food as it relates to my personal experience.
http://eatandletlive.com

'Eat and Let Die' is the collective DARK side. Like the image of Vader ordering a happy meal at Mikky-D.
http://eatandletdie.com

Submit your 'Death by Food' to: eatandletdie@gmail.com

Enjoy!