Skip to main content

Forget the kebabs: Turkey's chefs show what's really cooking

A new generation of culinary pioneers are reshaping notions of Turkish cuisine
Kantin tempts guests with asure, a traditional Turkish dessert, also known as ‘Noah’s Ark pudding' (MEE/Mary Pelletier)

ISTANBUL, Turkey - Just before 6pm on a blustery autumn Saturday, Maksut Askar, head chef at Istanbul’s acclaimed Neolokal restaurant, is taking a break before dinner service begins. He has a busy few hours ahead of him.

Soon, locals and tourists alike will crowd into the chic rooftop dining room overlooking the illuminated Old City, to enjoy Askar’s contemporary take on traditional Anatolian dishes. 

Updating a simple chicken dish, this Kantin course features apricot and red pepper sauce drizzled over the top (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
He is also prepping for a trip to a global food symposium, where he will be dispelling one of the greatest myths about Turkish food – that’s it’s all about the kebab.

'Our cuisine is actually all about home cooking and pot cooking - it is not just about kebabs and doners' 

- Maksut Askar, head chef, Neolokal

“Our cuisine is actually all about home cooking and pot cooking - it is not just about kebabs and doners,” Askar tells Middle East Eye in the courtyard of the SALT Galata, the historic Ottoman bank which houses Neolokal.

“I’m going to Ireland tomorrow to speak at an event called Food on the Edge, and the subject of my speech is: ‘Are we a kebab nation, or is it the tip of the iceberg?''' 

Patilican, an aubergine dish that is usually served with tomatoes, is made with hearty grains at Kantin (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
The answer to the first question, quite simply, is no. Turkey is not a kebab nation, despite what decades of tourists might think. Over the years, the doner kebab, comprised of meat shaved off a giant vertical spit and jammed into a pitta, has become a stereotypical Turkish meal for those visiting the country; it’s cheap, it’s quick, and it’s available on the street into the early morning hours, to head off a hangover (and not just in Turkey).

Three young cooks at Neolokal work together to compile a starter with fresh herbs and vegetables (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
But in recent years, Turkish chefs have been bringing traditional recipes out of their homes and into their restaurants. Combining the growing trend of farm-to-table ingredients with Turkey’s incredible variety of regional flavours, Istanbul's restaurant scene is now full of options for those looking for a meal with a little more substance.

Chefs are searching out local suppliers from around the country to stock their pantries, changing their menus seasonally, if not daily.

Elmali kurabiye, a traditional apple roll, is a simple sweet treat (MEE/Mary Pelletier)

At Neolokal, every dish is an updated classical regional recipe, and each has a story behind it.

'I would say there is no such thing as Turkish cuisine; cuisine is not about your ethnic group' 

- Maksut Askar, head chef, Neolokal

The tarhana soup, usually a simple mix of fermented grains, spices, yogurt and tomatoes, is made more complex by the addition of tirit, a beef slowly cooked in duck fat rather than itsusual stock. The gambilya, a simple yellow bean native to eastern Turkey, is turned into a sage fava cream, served with grilled octopus and pepper salsa. 

Freshly sourced octopus is prepped for the evening’s dinner menu (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
"I would say there is no such thing as Turkish cuisine; cuisine is not about your ethnic group,” Askar says.

“Your cuisine is about your geography, where you’re living, and what geography gives you. So if you respect the traditions, cultures or people, you cannot put it under one umbrella. Here, there are Georgians, there [are] Greeks, there are Armenians, there are Turkish, Syrians, Kurdish people, and Circassians, and they have their own living culture, so that’s why we decided to call it Anatolian cuisine."

Diners take in the scenic view of the Mihrimah Sultan mosque from the rooftop dining area of Neolokal (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
Before transitioning into the art of cooking, Askar studied culinary management at Istanbul's Bogazici University. After around 10 years in the management business, he moved into the kitchens of Istanbul restaurants like Lilbitz and Sekiz as a chef, then opened Neolokal in May 2014. 

A simple tomato salad is kicked up a notch with Kantin’s homemade oils and balsamic vinegar (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
“I’m a person who was born in this geography - the thing I know best is my own culture. So I cook my own culture. I cook my own traditions and my own childhood memories.”

Neolokal’s head chef, Maksut Askar, artfully arranges two servings of grilled bass (MEE/Mary Pelletier)

 

The comfort of food

Across town, in the neighbourhood of Nisantasi, chef Semsa Denizsel was one of the first to bring home cooking to the masses. Her restaurant, Kantin, has been around for the past 17 years, serving up the food she learned to cook in her mother’s kitchen.

Kantin offers a homey, classic feel, off the busy main street of Istanbul’s Nisantasi neighbourhood (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
As fresh octopus is being prepared behind the counter, she takes a break for a late lunch: a one-pot concoction of aubergine, meatballs and chickpeas, slow-cooked with hints of pepper paste and fresh mint. The dish is so simple that it does not even have a formal name.

“My kind of food is my comfort food,” says Denizsel, who is from a seventh-generation Istanbuli family.

Around the corner from Kantin’s dining room, a small dukkan, or shop, offers their 'new Istanbul cuisine’ for takeaway as well. Here, a traditional corek (sweet pastry) is given a modern twist with tahini flavouring (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
“But comfort food comes from the food you eat as a child. You can’t just say Istanbul food is this one thing; because we get so much immigration in Istanbul, the food changes as well.

"Food is about culture, and the culture is about people, and since the movement of the people changes, the culture also constantly keeps changing. So the food here is evolving all the time.”

October is sea bream season in the Mediterranean – here a Kantin chef preps the day’s succulent catch with dill and a bit of citrus zest, complemented with a slice of grilled sourdough (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
Denizsel’s menu changes on a daily basis, depending on the season and quality of produce  – a dining experience that was foreign to locals back in 2000. She takes inspiration for her dishes from the vast array of regional influences that have passed through her home city.

She has labelled her dishes "new Istanbul cuisine", which reflects the melting-pot nature of the city.

The kitchen at Kantin is full of gleaming pots for creating chef Semsa Denizsel's favourite comfort food dishes (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
“What you would eat [at] Kantin is not the typical Turkish food you would find,” Denizsel explains. “For example, we have an aubergine dish with tons of onions in it, called imam bayildi, or ‘imam fainting’. But the way it’s cooked in Istanbul is different than the way it is cooked in Anatolia. They fry it, we don’t, and the result is very different."

It is not clear where the distinct name of the dish came from, but some people say an imam swooned with pleasure when he first tasted the dish. 

Guests enjoy a late lunch in Kantin’s mirrored dining room (MEE/Mary Pelletier)

'Innovation' doesn't just mean foam

Just off Istiklal Street, Istanbul’s main shopping thoroughfare, another young chef, Civan Er, has dedicated his restaurant Yeni Lokanta to experimentation. Er formally trained in London at Leiths Cookery School and then worked at Istanbul restaurant Changa for about six years before its closure.

A slab of seasoned local sea bass waits to be cooked by the wood-burning oven at Yeni Lokanta (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
“We’re trying to do dishes that are new to ourselves,” he tells MEE. “That’s why the restaurant is called 'Yeni’ – literally it means new in Turkish.”

Diners can grab a patatesli pogaca, or savoury pastry, filled with potato, to go (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
The atmospheric eaterie, decorated with illustrated tiles and shelves of fresh sour dough bread, houses a brick oven, which on this particular evening is cooking up a rustic skillet full of slow-cooked spare ribs.

'Food is about culture, and culture is about people'

- Semsa Denizsel, chef, Kantin

For Er, "new" does not have to be molecular cuisine, full of jellies and foams – just innovative ways of combining ingredients he grew up with, creating multi-dimensional flavours, beyond just sweet and savoury.

The heart of Yeni Lokanta revolves around the restaurant’s wood-burning brick oven, where traditional flavours are given a contemporary twist (MEE/Mary Pelletier)
“In our manti (a traditional dumpling dish) we do it with our own twist,” he says. “Normally manti is just plain yoghurt and burnt butter. We get a salty yoghurt from Antakya in southeastern Turkey, and we make a sauce out of it with ginger, pomegranate molasses, lots of chillies, onions and it’s a different thing.

"All our dishes include some kind of twist, and people are starting to become more interested in this style of food, from our geography.”

This article is available in French on Middle East Eye French edition.

Stay informed with MEE's newsletters

Sign up to get the latest alerts, insights and analysis, starting with Turkey Unpacked

 
Middle East Eye delivers independent and unrivalled coverage and analysis of the Middle East, North Africa and beyond. To learn more about republishing this content and the associated fees, please fill out this form. More about MEE can be found here.