Title: All you want to know about T
1All you want to know about Türkiye
- WELCOME TO TURKISH CUISINE ...
- Have you ever heard of Shish Kebab ? Pieces of
lamb grilled over charcoal...A delicious Turkish
dish, well known by people who have visited
Istanbul... - What about Döner Kebab ? A roll of lamb on a
vertical skewer turning parallel to a hot
grill...A typical Turkish dish.. - Turkish Yoghurt...Other specialties Pilav and
Dolma (the name given to grape leaves,or green
peppers stuffed with rice and spices) might not
be familiar to you... - But Turkish sweets Lokum (Turkish Delight) and
Baklava...Worldwide famous... - If you are interested in ethnic food, come and
try the Turkish Cuisine...
2Food Drinks
- Visitors who are not familiar with Turkish
cuisine have a delightful surprise in store for
them stemming partly from the spectacular
variety of ingredients and partly from the
influence of the numerous civilizations which
have inhabited Anatolia throughout history,
Turkish cuisine is simply delicious. - Regional Regional Specialities
- As you visit different areas of Turkey, there are
local specialities which must be eaten in their
home region to be fully appreciated. Thus Kanlica
in Istanbul is famous for its yoghurt, Bursa for
its Iskendar Kebab, Gaziantep for its pistachio
nuts, the Black Sea for hamsi (fried anchovies)
and corn bread and the Syrian borderlands (Urfa
and Adana) for spicy shish kebabs.
3Startersand Soups
- A meal out will usually start with a selection of
mezes -- appetizers -- from an enormous and very
colourful platter brought to your table by the
waiter. Cold mezes include stuffed mussels (midye
dolma), humus, pureed aubergine salad (patlican
salatasi), stuffed vine leaves (yaprak dolma) and
Circassian chicken (cevizli tavuk). Among the
selection of hot mezes are usually borek, (thin
layers of flaky pastry stuffed with cheese, meat
or spinach), sautéed lamb's liver with onions and
kalamari. - Salad lovers will find a variety of unusual,
spicy herbs appearing along with the standard
tomato and cucumber, especially in the south.
Roka is a bitter herb which translates as rocket
in English, and you may also find spiky dereotu
(bitter cress), nane (fresh mint) or even kuzu
kulla (sorrel). A spinachy-textured vegetable
frequently served in garlic-yogurt is called
semizotu, known to us as purslane.
4Lentil Soup
- Ingredients (6 servings) 1 glass red lentils
4 glasses of broth 1 glass water 1
tablespoon flour 1 onion 1 carrot 1
tablespoon margarine 4 slices of white bread
3 tablespoons margarine 2 egg yolks 1
glass of milk Salt to taste Chop the onion,
put into a saucepan with 1 tablespoon of
margarine and sauté. When onion is semi-sautéed
add the flour and mix well. Wash the lentils,
chop the carrot and put them in the saucepan.
Pour the broth and water into the saucepan, add
salt as desired and cook the soup for 30 minutes
until the lentils are pasty. Strain the soup and
pour it back into the same saucepan. Bring to the
boil. Meanwhile blend egg yolks with milk well in
a bowl and mix this into the soup. Remove
saucepan from heat after 2 minutes. The soup is
now ready to be served. Cut 4 slices of white
bread into cubes. Fry bread in a pan with 2
tablespoons of margarine. Drain off the margarine
and put the bread cubes (croutons) on the soup
5Wedding Soup (Dügün Çorbasi)
- Ingredients
Measure Amount - Lamb meat with bone
---- ½ kg.Water
4
cups 960 gSalt
2
teaspoons 12gEgg
1 medium size
50gLemon Juice 1
½ tablespoons 20gAll- purpose
flour ¼
cup 30g Water
1 cup
240gButter or margarine
1 tablespoon 15gRed
Pepper ½
teaspoon 1g - InstructionsSimmer meat in 4 cups of water in a
large saucepan until tender. Remove from liquid
drain. Bone and dice stir in liquid. Add 1 cup of
hot water. Season with salt, cover and simmer
gently. Combine beaten egg, yolk, lemon juice and
flour, mixing well. Add 1 cup of cold water
stir Blend in broth gradually stirring
constantly. Simmer gently for 2-3 minutes. Remove
from heat. Melt margarine in a skillet. Add red
pepper stir. Sprinkle over soup. Serve hot. - (In the past, this dish was served to guests
during wedding ceremonies. For this reason it is
called Wedding Soup)
6- Tarhana Soup
- Ingredients 100 gr. yeast 300 gr. onions
1000 gr very ripe tomatoes 250 gr. big red
peppers (may be hot or sweet according to taste)
250 gr. natural yoghurt (unsweetened and
unflavored) 2000 gr flour 1 glass of water
Mix yeast with water and make it into a paste.
Peel and strain tomatoes. Chop the peppers
thinly. Grate the onions. Mix the yeast, yoghurt,
tomatoes, peppers and onions in a bowl until they
turn into a thick liquid. Start kneading the
mixture by adding flour gradually. Knead the
dough until it becomes very thick. Flour a tray,
put the thick dough on the tray and cover it with
a piece of cloth. If the dough is in a warm place
it will puff up in 1 hour, if it is in a cool
place it will puff up in 5-6 hours. When the
dough has puffed up, remove it from the tray and
knead well. Then put it on the tray as before and
cover it. Go on with the same procedure until the
dough no longer puffs up. Now that your tarhana
is ready, you can take a piece of the dough and
see that it breaks without stretching. Form the
dough into small pieces, place pieces on a cloth
and let them dry. Check the pieces as often as
possible for drying. Crumble the dried pieces.
(It is necessary to check the dough often,
because if the dough dries too much, crumbling
gets more difficult.)
7 Olive Salad
- Ingredients1. Chick Peas - 1 can2. Chopped
Cucumber, Onion, Celery, Coriander, Tomatoes,
Lettuce - can also include Peppers, Romaine,
Broccoli, Carrots and other veggies.3. Salt - to
tasteFor Dressing1. Olive Oil2. Lemon -
13. Garlic - 2 cloves4. Black Pepper - 1/2
tbsp To make salad Drain and wash the chick
peas and layer them in a salad bowl. Then add all
the veggies and salt. Mix well.To make the
dressing Mix olive oil, lime juice, garlic and
pepper.Drizzle the dressing over the salad.
This can also be substituted with any kind of
ready-made dressing available in the market.
Also, I garnished the salad with few nuts to make
it more exciting.
8Potato Salad
- POTATO PUREE SALAD (Patates Püresi) (Salatasi)
- 4 large white potatoes1 finely chopped onion1/4
cup olive oil1 tblsp vinegar2 tsp lemon juice2
hard boiled eggs1 large tomato1/2 cup chopped
parsleysalt and pepper to taste8-10 black
olivesBoil and peel the potatoes and mash well
with a fork in a bowl. Add chopped onions,
parsley, salt and pepper, vinegar, oil and lemon
juice and mix well. Cut hard boiled eggs and
tomato into wedges and garnish the smoothed top
of the puree salad with them. Black olives are
part of the garnish as well as some wedges or
slices of fresh hard tomatoes.
9Main courses
- Main courses are generally fish or meat kebabs,
though this word is used in a much wider sense
than generally understood in the West. The spices
and herbs used to delicately flavor the meat
varies from region to region. Guvec dishes are
delicious casseroles cooked in earthenware pots.
Et sote, a kind of goulash, is very good, as is
coban kavurma. The eating of fish has an elevated
if not cult status in Turkey. It is best eaten in
an open-air restaurant by the sea, preferably
Anadolu Kavagi, Rumeli Kavagi or Kumkapi, always
accompanied by raki, and enjoyed in the company
of good friends. The choice depends on the catch
of the day, and may include swordfish (kilic),
bluefish (lufer), turbot (kalkan) or lobster
(istakoz). - The staple of lunch time cafeterias is ev yemek,
which translates literally as home food,
signifying tasty vegetable and meat-based stews.
An interesting aspect of Turkish drinking culture
is the all-night iskembe parlor, which serves
tripe soup. It is considered medicinal after a
night on the town, with crushed garlic from a
bowl, red pepper, oregano and vinegar added to
taste.
10Turkish Döner
- Short for dönerkebab, from the Turkish for
rotating grilled meat, and closely related to the
Greek gyros or the arab schawarma, it is hard to
think of a döner without thinking meat.
11- Lahmacun (Turkish pizza)
- Ingredients
- A pack of pitas
- 1 lb ground beef
- 1 lb white onion
- 1 or 2 tomatoes
- Salt, black pepper to taste
- If you can't find tomatoes, you can replace it
with 2 table spoons of tomatoe puree. - Preparation
- Peel, wash, place onions with tomatoes in a food
processor and ground. - Add salt, black pepper and meat, ground 30
seconds more. - With the help of a spoon spread this mixture over
pitas. - Put them in oven and bake at 400F about 20-30
minutes. - Check to see whether meat is cooked. Serve hot.
12- Menemen can be used in a couple of different ways
such as Turkish breakfast specialty or lazy
dinner option or great summer dish. Must-have
traditional ingredients for menemen are eggs,
tomato, onion, peppers (preferably banana
peppers), and parsley. I modify the traditional
recipe by replacing onions with green onions and
adding feta cheese. menemen for four6 eggs,
well-beaten4 juicy tomatoes, diced (you can also
use canned diced tomatoes prefer petite diced
ones or put regular one in blender for a couple
of seconds)3 green onions with tops, finely
chopped4 fresh peppers, finely chopped (I used
red and orange Italian sweet peppers and 2 green
chilies)1/2 cup crumbled feta1/2 bunch flat
leaf parsley, finely chopped2 tsp spicy pepper
flakes1 tsp black peppersalt1-2 tbsp oil or
butter - -In a frying pan heat oil and add onion. Cook on
medium until they're soft and then add fresh
peppers.-Once they're cooked, pour in tomatoes,
salt, and pepper. Wait until tomatoes cook down a
little. -Stir in beaten eggs and feta. Stir
constantly.-Right before eggs are cooked, add
chopped parsley.-Serve with bread.
13SHISH KEBAB - Sis Kebab
- 5 Servings1 kilo of lamb meat (from the thigh
or shoulder) cut into small pieces.2 green
peppers4 tomatoes Peel and seed the tomatoes
and cut them into large pieces. Cut the green
peppers in half, remove the seeds and cut into
smaller pieces, Skewer a piece of meat, tomato,
green pepper successively. Boil on a barbecue, 3
to 4 minutes per side.
14Kebap With Eggplant (Patlicanli Kebap)
- 5 Servings1 kilo lamb meat 2 glasses of water
2 onions 2 soup spoons butter 2 tomatoes (or
1/2 coffee cup tomato sauce) 4 small
eggplantssalt, pepper Peel and cut the
eggplants lengthwise into 4 pieces, then each
quarter in 3 cm. long pieces. Soak the eggplant
pieces in well salted water for 1/2 hour. Then
squeeze them and fry them in a frying pan where
the butter and some oil have been heated. Remove
them from the frying pan and put aside. - Then, in the same frying pan, partially cook the
meat for 3 or 4 minutes, then put it all in a
saucepan where the kebab will be cooked. In the
frying pan, brown the onion that has been halved
and cut into fine slices. Add the peeled, diced
tomatoes (or the tomato sauce diluted in a half
glass of water). Stir for one minute. Add a
coffee spoon of pepper, a soup spoon of salt, 2
glasses of hot water, the tomatoes and onions to
the meat in the saucepan. Cook for about 1 and
1/2 hours until the meat becomes soft. Add the
previously cooked eggplant to the saucepan and
cook 30 to 40 minutes more.
15Firinda Pilic Kizartmasi (Roasted Chicken)
- 4 Servings1 small coffee cup of yoghurt 1
tablespoon margarine1 tablespoon tomato paste 2
chickens Salt Put the chickens into a
saucepan, cover them with water, add salt and
cook them only as much as they do not fall apart. - Put the chickens into a large pan. Cover with a
sauce of well beaten yoghurt, tomato paste and
melted margarine. Put the pan into the oven to
roast until brown. - Meanwhile make a delicious "ic pilav" described
in this series with the chicken broth to serve
with the meal. You can use the sauce of yoghurt,
tomato paste and melted margarine with roasted
meat, poultry and game. It's always a success.
16Dry White Bear Pilaki ( Kuru Fasulya Pilakisi)
- 6 Servings1 and 1/2 coffee spoons salt1 and
1/2 coffee spoons sugar1 carrot1 celery, 1
potato, 1 tomato1 clove of garlic1 coffee cup
water1 finely chopped onion2 and 1/2 cups olive
oil250 grams dry beans Soak the beans in
water overnight. Place them in a saucepan of
water, heat on low flame for 45 minutes and then
drain. Peel and dice the vegetables, and cut the
garlic into thin slices. - Heat the oil in a saucepan, add the onion and
garlic and brown for 2 minutes. Then add the
carrot and brown for 2 minutes, then add the
celery and potato and brown them for 2 minutes as
well. Finally add the beans, the grated tomato,
water, salt and sugar and cook on a very low heat
for 1 hour. Serve when cool.
17Eggplant with Olive Oil(Imam Bayildi)
- 5 Servings 1 and 1/2 tea cups water1 medium
tomato3 cloves of garlic3/4 glass of olive
oil5 medium eggplants 5 not too large
onionschopped parsley, salt to taste Remove
the stems of the eggplants leaving 2 cm
remaining. Peel the eggplant leaving length-wise
bands 2 cm wide (to prevent the eggplant from
crumbling while cooking). Cook them in olive oil,
turning them on all sides. (They may be
previously treated with salt to prevent them from
absorbing too much oil while being cooked). - In a frying pan, brown the onion which has been
cut into very fine rings, and the garlic cut into
small pieces. When the onion and garlic begin to
turn brown, add the chopped parsley. Place the
eggplants side by side in a baking dish or in. a
large cake mold. Split the eggplants lengthwise
and remove some of the seeds if necessary,
spreading the two halves apart. In the cavity,
put the mixture of garlic, onion and cooked
parsley. Garnish each eggplant with a tomato
ring. - Place the remaining oil on the bottom of the dish
or mold, (if none remains, make a sauce with 2 or
3 tomatoes). Place in a warm oven for 20 minutes.
Serve when cool.
18Etli Yaprak Dolmasi Stuffed Grape Leaves
- To Prepare the Filling Icin hazirlanisi 500
grams ground meat 150 grams rice 1/2 soup spoon
salt, a little pepperChopped dill, parsley and
mint 5 (1/2 bunch each)5-6 finely chopped
onions Place the onion on a soup plate,
sprinkle with salt, and knead until the onion
becomes transparent. Add water and drain. Repeat
this procedure twice.Place the prepared onion
and all the other ingredients in a bowl, and mix
very well. The filling is ready. 6 Servings1
soup spoon butter 500 grams grape leaves (fresh
or preserved in salt) the juice of one lemon - Chose small, finely veined leaves. Remove the
stems. Boil the leaves for 5 minutes in 10
glasses of water to which the lemon juice has
been added. Remove them from the water, drain and
let cool. Put the firmest leaves with the most
veins on the bottom of the saucepan.Place the
stuffed leaves in a saucepan. Add 2 and 1/2
glasses of water, and the butter and cook on a
low heat for. 35 or 40 minutes.
19Manti
- RECIPE 1 and 1/2 coffee spoons red pepper12
glasses water 200 grams ground meat 3 onions 5
cloves of garlic5 soup spoons butter500 grams
bowtie noodles 500 grams yoghurt In a
saucepan, brown the onions in 3 and 1/2 soup
spoons of butter. Add the ground meat and a
coffee spoon of salt. Mix and cook on a low heat,
then put aside. - In another saucepan, boil the noodles for 15
minutes in salted water. Drain. Pour the noodles
into the sauce pan containing the meat. Mix and
reheat. - Beat the yoghurt and crushed. garlic. Pour the
noodles onto a serving dish and pour the yoghurt
sauce over them. Finally sprinkle the dish with a
soup spoon of melted butter to which red pepper
is added. For the Sauce1 and 1/2 coffee
spoons red pepper100 grams butter400 grams
yoghurt - For Boiling6 glasses meat broth Make a
hollow place in the center of the flour. Put an
egg yolk and a whole egg, 1/2 soup spoon salt and
a coffee cup of water into it. Make a dough. Roll
it into a ball and cover with a damp cloth. Let
stand 1 hour. - Sprinkle the dough and rolling pin with flour and
roll out the dough as thin as possible. Cut the
dough into 5 cm. squares. - To Prepare the Filling
- Brown the finely chopped onions and ground meat
for 3 minutes. Add salt, pepper and stir. Place a
small portion of this mixture, the size of a
large hazelnut, in the center of each square of
dough, Fold each corner to the center, sealing
the sides so that the small package will not
become undone. Some people find it easier to make
a single fold triangle shape manti. Close the
sides well. - Place the "manti" in a large, round, buttered
cake mold and bake for about 25 minutes, until
they are brown. - Pour the broth over the "manti", then either
return them to the oven, or cook over a low heat,
until they have absorbed all the liquid. Place
the "manti" in a serving dish. First pour 50
grams of melted butter over them, then 400 grams
of beaten yoghurt, and finally 50 grams of butter
mixed with a coffee spoon of red pepper.
20Börekler
- Sigara Boregi, Muska Boregi
- For approximately 12 borek1 yufka1/2 bunch
dill1/2 bunch parsley1/2 glass oil150-200
grams white cheese Spread out one "Yufka" and
fold it in half. Cut along the diameter,
producing 2 half-circles, one on the other. - To make the "cigarettes" trace 5 to 7 lines from
the center of the straight side, forming sharp
triangles. Place a little mixture of white
cheese, parsley and dill at the base of the
triangle. Roll toward the point while folding in
the 2 sides to prevent the filling from leaking
out. To make the point stick to the dough, dip it
in a saucer of water before finishing the last
roll. - When made, the "amulet borek" has a triangular
shape. Fold the "yufka" in two and cut along the
diameter to obtain the 2 half-circles, one over
the other. Cut each "yufka" with a knife in 10
cm. wide lengths perpendicular to the diameter,
giving you long strips of dough. - Place a small portion of mashed white cheese,
parsley and dill mixture at the base of each
strip. Take the small side of the strip and fold
it to the large side, and then take the point and
fold it to the next side. Continue until the end
of the strip. (See diagram). - Stick the last point to the dough by dipping it
in water first. When the borek are thus prepared,
fry them in oil until golden brown in color.
21Puf Boregi Puf Börek
- 1 egg 1 soup spoon olive oil 1 to 1 and 1/2
glasses of oil for cooking 250 grams flour 250
grams white cheese or, 250 grams ground meat
mixed with grated onion3/4 coffee cup water 75
grams butter Make a dough with the flour,
water, egg and oil. Wait 15 minutes. Separate the
dough into 5 equal pieces. Roll the 5 pieces with
a pastry rolling pin. Spread melted butter on
each surface and place one on the other. Let
stand 1/2 hour. - Now roll out the dough as fine as possible into a
large disk. On one half of the disk, place small
portions of the filling, be it white cheese or
meat mixed with onion. The small portions should
be spaced about 10 cm. apart. Fold the empty half
over the filled half. Around the base of each
portion of filling cut a half-moon with an
aluminum saucer or something similar. Press
around the circumference of each mound with your
fingers to close it well, then fry the borek in
oil.
22Köfteler
- Dry Köfte - Kuru Kofte 5 Servings 1 soup spoon
butter1/2 coffee cup water100 grams bread
(without crust)2 eggs2 small onions, grated. 4
soup spoons flour750 grams of ground lamb, or a
mixture of ground beef and lamblittle pepper and
cuminSalt to taste Soak the bread in water,
and when thoroughly soaked, remove from the water
and sponge by hand. - Place the bread in a salad bowl. Add 2 eggs,
salt, pepper, cumin, onions, water and the ground
meat. Knead and roll in the palm of your hand
until they have the thickness and shape of a
finger. Roll the kofte in flour, then fry them in
butter for 4 or 5 minutes.
23Woman Thigh Köfte (Kadin Budu Köfte)
- 5 Servings500 grams ground meat (preferably
lamb2 egg whites 1 small coffee cup of rice1
finely chopped onion1/2 soup spoon salt - For frying 2 egg yolks a glass of oil Mix
all the ingredients, except the oil and egg
whites. Knead. Make flattened ovals 5 cm. long.
Place these meat patties side by side in a large
frying pan and cover with water. Cook on medium
heat. As soon as the water is absorbed place the
enlarged patties on a plate. - Beat the yolks in a bowl. Heat the oil in a small
frying pan. Place each patty in the egg yolk,
then in the oil. Brown each side for 3 minutes
and serve at once.
24Humus
- . Humus have received the highest demand, so I
wanted to start with the humus recipe. Below the
ingredients youll need for preparation - Tahini (1 tablespoon)
- one can of chickpeas
- one garlic clove
- some vegetable oil
- some water
- salt
- lemon juice You can find tahini at asian shops,
it is sesame seed paste. for convenience, to be
more economical get your dried chickpeas, soak
overnight, skim off any froth, and boil for two
hours. Now you have the ingredients ready chuck
the chickpeas, water, salt, lemon, garlic, Tahini
and some of the oil in an electric blender, blend
away, adding the oil, slowly, until the paste is
just as chunky or as smooth as you like it. Taste
as you go, adjusting the ingredients as required. - Thats all, and your humus is ready, What makes
different a humus from another it the amount used
for each ingredient, it is not very detailed here
but you can try a little of tahini and adjust
ingredients until you get the best humus !
25Desserts
- In restaurants, dessert is often a beautifully
presented selection of seasonal fruits. In spring
this may be green almonds and plums, generally an
acquired taste for foreigners. There are
strawberries in May, cherries in June, melons in
July and August and apples, pears and
pomegranates in autumn. Winter is the time for
Turkish-grown citrus fruits and bananas. - For a wider selection of sweets try the pastane,
or pudding shop, where you'll find all the
traditional Turkish sweets such as lokum, or
Turkish delight, baklava, kadayif, halva and
asure (traditionally held to contain the forty
different ingredients left in the Ark's kitchen
when Noah sighted Ararat). Sutlac, or rice
pudding, is also popular, as are profiteroles,
best tried at Inci Pastanesi on Istanbul's
Istiklal Caddesi.
26Turkish Delight
- Turkish Delight, lokum, or loukoum is a
confection made from starch and sugar. It is
often flavored with rosewater and lemon, the
former giving it a characteristic pale pink
color. It has a soft, jelly-like and sometimes
sticky consistency, and is often packaged and
eaten in small cubes that are dusted with sugar
or copra to prevent sticking. Some types contain
small nut pieces, usually pistachio, hazelnut or
walnuts. Other common types include flavors such
as cinnamon or mint.
27How To Make Baklava
- Ingredients1 glass melted margarine 1 glass of
ground walnuts1 lemon1 teaspoon olive oil 1
teaspoon salt2 eggs 250 g flour 750 g
sugarStarch Knead flour, salt and a glass of
water to a dough. Fold dough and knead again.
Cover with a damp cloth and leave for some time. - Divide dough into 8-10 pieces. Spread starch on
it and roll out as thin as possible. Place half
of it into a pan, pouring margarine on each
layer. Spread walnuts evenly on it and place the
remaining layers with margarine between one upon
the other. Cut into squares. Pour the remaining
margarine evenly on the baklava. Bake in medium
hot oven for about an hour. - In the meantime put sugar in a saucepan, cover
with water, add one tablespoon lemon juice and
boil to a heavy syrup. Pour it upon the lukewarm
baklava, a little at a time, so that baklava
absorbs the entire syrup. Serve cold.
28BAKLAVA
29Sutlatch - Sutlac
- 100 grams rice2 and 1/2 litres milk200 grams
powdered sugar50 grams potato starch mixed with
a glass of milk. Wash the rice and let it
soak 1 hour in warm water. Drain. Boil the rice
in the milk while stirring constantly with a
spoon. Continue to boil it for 30 minutes on a
low heat, stirring occasionally. Add the sugar
and continue to cook the "sutlatch" for 5 more
minutes. Add the starch with milk and stir until
the mixture thickens. Pour into dessert bowls and
serve cold.
30Ashure- Asure
- 600 grams sugar 1 glass milk3 and 1/2 litres
water 1/2 tea cup rose water 1/2 tea cup potato
starch - To Soak Overnight 150 grams chick peas 200
grams dry beans 200 grams rice 200 grams wheat - To Have in Reserve 12 dried apricots 12 dried
figs 125 grams raisins 150 grams walnuts50
grams butter50 grams pistachio nuts 75 grams
pinenuts Cook the soaked chick peas and beans
separately. Drain. Boil the rice in half the
water, the wheat in the other half. Cook the rice
for 30 minutes and blend it in the water in which
it was cooked. Add this puree to the wheat and
continue to cook for approximately 3/4 hour. Add
the chick peas and beans. Mix and remove from the
heat. - Boil the figs, walnuts, raisins, apricots, pine
nuts in a large quantity of water. Cut the figs
and apricots in four. Put aside 10 pieces each of
apricots and figs, 20 pieces of walnuts and half
the pine nuts. These will be used for decoration.
- Pour the rest of the ingredients, including the
butter, but not the milk, rosewater or starch,
into the saucepan where the wheat is cooking.
Boil for 15 minutes. Add the milk, the starch
mixed with rose water, and boil for 3 minutes.
Pour into dessert bowls, decorate with the nuts
and fruit and serve cool.
31Tulumba Tatlisi
- 1 soup spoon sugar100 grams butter 250 grams
flour 400 grams water 50 grams potato starch 6
eggs - For the Syrup1 kilo sugar2 soup spoons lemon
juice500 grams water - For Frying2 glasses olive oila pinch of salt
Prepare the syrup with the ingredients shown
above by boiling them for 2 minutes. Put it
aside. Melt the butter in a saucepan. Add the
water, salt and sugar and bring to a boil. Add
the flour while beating the mixture vigorously
with a whisk. Cook for 10 minutes while
continually beating it. Remove from the heat. - When the mixture has cooled, add the eggs one by
one, then the starch while mixing constantly.
Warm the oil in a frying pan. Make a horn with
heavy cloth (or use a pastry bag). Leave the end
open and fill the horn with the dough. Squeeze
out pieces of dough into the oil, each one being
4 or 5 cm. wide. Move the pan back and forth
occasionally while the cakes are cooking. Cook
for 10 - 15 minutes until the cakes are golden
brown. - Put them into the cooled syrup and let stand 15
minutes, then place them on a serving dish. Serve
when the tulumba have completely cooled off.
32Fig Jam (Incir Receli)
- 1 kg sugar1 tablespoon of lemon juice10
cloves100 wild figs for jam Skin the green
figs using gloves in order to avoid your hands
from getting dark. Cook them in plenty of water
for some time. Rinse in cold water. Squeeze each
fig gently. - Boil sugar with about three glasses of water to a
thick syrup. When ready add figs and cook on
medium heat until figs let go water and absorb it
again. Add 1 tablespoon of lemon juice, boil for
one minute and take off fire. - You may add cloves or vanilla to give more
flavour.
33Cezerye (
- Name of dish CezeryeMain Ingredients Carrot,
walnut (crushed), tea biscuits, sugar, crushed
coconut
34Breakfast
- Turkish breakfasts are dominated by freshly baked
bread, eaten with salty white cheese, olives,
tomatoes, cucumbers, butter, honey, jam, and
often a boiled egg. Deliciously creamy yoghurt is
an optional extra. Other breakfast alternatives
include pastry shops which serve a variety of
flaky pastries with cheese or meat fillings.
35Breakfast
36Drinks
- Turkey produces some excellent dry wines, both
red and white, which go well with a variety of
foods. Names to look out for include Villa
Doluca, Kavakladere Cankaya, Yakut and Dikmen.
Efes and Tuborg beers are almost always the only
beers available, and both are good. A must is the
local aniseed-based drink, raki, drunk with water
added and called "lion's milk" by Turks. But heed
this tried and tested warning well you must
drink the raki and not let it drink you! A meal
is often followed by an espresso sized cup of
Turkish coffee, though Italian coffees are
becoming increasingly popular. - For day-time and non-alcoholic alternatives, try
ayran, a yogurt, salt and water mix.
Freshly-squeezed juices are also widely available
and cheap, but best in winter when the citrus
season is in full force in the South. There is
also carrot juice, banana milk and sour apple
juice. Strong black tea in tulip shaped glasses
will be served any time you are asked to sit and
wait, or go visiting, but there is also a strong
tradition of herbal teas, some of which (like
sage) are unusual to the western palate but very
good. - Boza and sahlep are popular drinks in winter. The
former is made from mildly fermented millet and
tastes rather like eggnog. Sahlep, on the other
hand, is served hot on ferry boats and other
public places and is made from the pulverized
tubers of the wild orchid. It is very sweet and
comes sprinkled with cinnamon, and is the perfect
companion on a cold winters day.
37Turkish Tea (Türk Çayi)
Although there are some different tea brewing
styles in Turkey, this one is almost common among
Turkish peopleFirst put the water into a kettle,
put enough tea into a teapot and put the teapot
on the kettle.When the water boils in the
kettle, pour some on tea into the teapot. Wait 15
minutes. The tea in the teapot mustn't be boiled
but the water in the kettle must be hot. Then
pour brewed tea into teacup (or tea glass), half
of the cups must be brewed tea and other half the
hot water.Brewing time is longer in Turkey, but
they add water to brew and they generally use
sugar.
38Ayran
1 pt. low-fat or non-fat yogurt (if you are in
Southern California try using "Trader Joe's
non-fat yogurt" found at Trader Joe's speacialty
food stores.)1 cup cold water,Salt to taste,1
cup ice cubes. Mix the yogurt with the water,ice
and salt in an electric blender, or beat well
together using a wooden spoon. Serve well
chilled.Mixture whould be thick
39Turkish Coffee (Türk Kahvesi)
- Centuries ago, when people devoted more time to
attend to the demands of their earthly pleasures
and less time to the demands of business and
corporate life, coffee making developed some
rituals that exist in lite versions in our
days. In old times, connoisseurs expected their
coffee to be heated slowly over charcoal embers
for 15 to 20 minutes, the copper coffee pot being
frequently taken away from the fire to prevent
overheating. - A connoisseur can easily tell the difference
between a properly made Turkish coffee and one
prepared the way cheap restaurants would do,
basically boiling the coffee quickly, degrading
thus the taste and producing little if any froth
that needs to cover the cup of coffee. - Although to this day there are still a few people
who either do or at least know the days when
coffee was heated on charcoal, for all practical
purposes modern electric or gas stove tops became
the heating equipment of choice. To make proper
Turkish coffee you need Turkish coffee beans, a
Turkish coffee pot (cezve), and Turkish coffee
cups (fincan), and optionally, if you want to
grind the beans, a Turkish coffee grinder (kahve
degirmeni). Note that Turkish coffee requires
extra fine ground coffee which some electrical
grinders fail to produce. To make Turkish
coffee - 1. Pour in cold water in the coffee pot. You
should use one cup of cold water for each cup you
are making and then add an extra half cup for
the pot. Add a teaspoonful of the ground Turkish
coffee per cup in the water while the water is
cold and stir. The amount of coffee may be varied
to taste, but do not forget, there will be a
thick layer of coffee grounds left at the bottom
of your cup for properly made Turkish coffee.
Dont fill the pot too much. If you need to add
sugar this is the time to do it. - 2. Heat the pot as slowly as you can. The slower
the heat the better it is. Make sure you watch it
to prevent overflowing when the water boils. - 3. When the water boils pour some (not all) of
the coffee equally between the cups, filling each
cup about a quarter to a third of the way. This
will make sure that everybody gets a fair share
of the foam forming on top of the pot, without
which coffee loses much of its taste. Continue
heating until coffee boils again (which will be
very short now that it has already boiled). Then
distribute the rest of the coffee between the
cups. - Since there is no filtering of coffee at any time
during this process, you should wait for a few
minutes before drinking your delicious Turkish
coffee while the coffee grounds settle at the
bottom of the cup.
40TURKISH COFFEE
41Sahlep
- Ingredients 4 cups milk 1 cup sugar
1 Teaspoon sahlep powder (also sold in
supermarkets) - Preparation Mix sugar and sahlep powder (dried
powdered roots of a mountain orchid - Orchis
Latifolia or Orchis Anatolica in Latin) in a pan.
Add the cold milk and some sugar stirring
constantly. Heat the mixture until it boils again
stirring constantly. Let it boil for 2-3 minutes
and remove from heat. Serve it warm and garnished
with powdered cinnamon. - Tips The thicker the sahlep is, the better it
gets, it's a hot and creamy drink. Sometimes
addition of a little bit of starch might help to
get the desired consistency. It is a remedy for
sore throats and colds, therefore it's mainly
consumed in the winter months for cold climate.
Because the real sahlep powder is expensive, on
the streets they make it with more cornstarch
than the real thing, that's why it would be
better to do it at home or go to reputable
pudding shops in Beyoglu district or along the
Bosphorus for example. - Usually the mountain orchids have tuberous roots
rich of starch-like substance. These tubers are
gathered while the plant is in flower, then
washed, boiled in water or milk and then dried.
These dry tubers are grinded. This grinded powder
is called sahlep. - Sahlep can also be added to ice-creams in the
city of Kahramanmaras, it's the famous Maras
Ice-Cream. In Maras ice-creams, sahlep gives its
great taste and strong mixture with goat milk
being the first and the most important element of
Maras ice-cream, and the second one is real goat
milk.
42Salgam
- Ingredients
- Water, violet carrot, turnip, salt, pounded wheat
or bulgur flour. - A traditional Turkish drink (pronounced shal-gum)
made from dark turnips and violet carrots and
sira. It's served cold with pickles and available
in Hot and Mild formulas. It's a very traditional
drink in Adana province and in the GAP and South
Eastern Anatolia, especially served with Kebab
dishes. Some people drink it with Raki saying
that it removes or softens the effects of
alcohol. It has a dark red or purple color and a
very strong soar taste. - Because it's a juice full of minerals and vitamin
C, it's one of the most preferred drinks in the
winter time for colder climates. It also contains
Thiamin (B1) and Riboflavin (B2) vitamins, and is
rich in Calcium, Potassium and iron. - Preparation
- it's made of the essence of violet carrots.
First, bulgur rice flour is left for lactic acid
fermentation for a week until it gets very soar,
than put in wooden barrels made of mulberry tree.
After well cleaning and boiling violet carrots,
it's put in these barrels together with dark
turnips (Brassica Napus in Latin). After another
week in these barrels salt is added. When Salgam
gets mature in these barrels like a wine does, at
the end the fermentation period it's filtered and
ready to drink. For people who prefer it hot and
spicy, hot sauce obtained from red paprika is
added in as well. The total processing time to
prepare it is between 2-4 weeks.
43Lets Say
- "Do not dismiss the dish saying that it is just,
simply food. The blessed thing is an entire
civilization in itself"
44THANK YOU !!!TARSUS PUBLIC EDUCATION CENTRE04
TH 09 TH OF MAY , 2008 LATVIA MEETING