Turkish Cuisine
East Meets West
Turkish cuisine is a magnificent bridge between East and West, shaped by the imperial kitchens of the Ottoman Empire and the diverse landscapes of Anatolia. From smoky kebabs to delicate pastries, every dish reflects centuries of cultural exchange and an unwavering devotion to hospitality.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Turkish cuisine
The Ottoman Empire (1299-1922) served as the great synthesizer, with the imperial kitchens of Topkapı Palace employing hundreds of specialized cooks who elevated court cuisine into an art form rivaling French haute cuisine.
Geography plays a decisive role: the Black Sea coast yields hazelnuts, tea, and anchovies; the Aegean and Mediterranean coasts produce world-class olive oil, figs, and citrus; the interior Anatolian plateau is grain and livestock country; and the southeast reflects Arabic and Kurdish influences with fiery kebabs and rich baklava.
Baklava
Lokum
Key Flavors
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Turkish cuisine
Mehmet Gurs
Finnish-Turkish chef behind Mikla in Istanbul, a pioneer of New Anatolian cuisi…
Click to read moreMusa Dagdeviren
Chef-owner of Ciya Sofrasi in Istanbul, a culinary archaeologist who has spent …
Click to read moreFatih Tutak
Chef who earned Turkey's first Michelin star in 2022 at his eponymous Istanbul …
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Turkish cuisine
The Turkish Cookbook
A monumental Phaidon collection of 550 recipes documenting the incredible breadth of Turkish culinary heritage.
Istanbul and Beyond
An exploration of Turkey's diverse regional cuisines through 150 recipes gathered from home cooks and chefs across the …
Turquoise
A journey through Turkey's Aegean and Mediterranean coastal cuisines, connecting Turkish and Middle Eastern culinary tr…
Explore All Dishes
4 authentic recipes from Turkish cuisine