🇹🇷 Turkish Cuisine
Ottoman-rooted cuisine bridging European and Asian traditions, with kebabs, meze, and borek
Definition
Turkish cuisine is the national culinary tradition of the Republic of Turkey, a transcontinental nation straddling Southeastern Europe and Western Asia, and one of the most historically layered food cultures within the broader Middle Eastern culinary sphere. Rooted in the imperial kitchens of the Ottoman Empire, it synthesizes the pastoral foodways of Central Asian Turkic peoples with the agricultural sophistication of Anatolia, the Levant, the Balkans, and the Mediterranean littoral.
At its core, Turkish cuisine is organized around grilled and braised meats (most iconically kebabs in their regional varieties), slow-cooked legume and vegetable dishes (zeytinyağlı, meaning "cooked in olive oil"), fermented dairy products such as yogurt and beyaz peynir (white cheese), and a vast repertoire of böreks (stuffed pastry) and pilavs (rice or bulgur dishes). The meze table — an array of small shared dishes — functions both as a meal opener and a cultural institution. Flavor principles emphasize balance rather than heat: the interplay of sour (pomegranate molasses, sumac, lemon), savory (dried red pepper flakes, cumin, allspice), and fresh herbs (flat-leaf parsley, dill, mint) defines the palate.
Within the Middle Eastern culinary family, Turkish cuisine is distinguished by the pronounced influence of Central Asian and Balkan culinary legacies, a significantly greater use of wheat-based pastry traditions, and a secular state context that has shaped a nationally unified (if internally diverse) restaurant and hospitality culture.
Historical Context
The culinary identity of Turkey is inseparable from the history of the Ottoman Empire (c. 1299–1922), whose palace kitchens in Istanbul (the Topkapı Sarayı mutfakları) became centers of culinary refinement, codifying techniques and dishes from across a territory spanning three continents. Pre-Ottoman foundations were laid by the Seljuk Turks, who carried the pastoral and nomadic foodways of Central Asia — heavy reliance on lamb, fermented dairy, and flatbreads — into Anatolia following the Battle of Manzikert (1071). The Anatolian agricultural substrate, one of the world's earliest farming regions, contributed a deep tradition of legume cultivation, viticulture, and grain processing that predates Turkic settlement by millennia.
The nineteenth and early twentieth centuries introduced new dynamics: the Tanzimat-era opening to European trade brought ingredients such as tomatoes and peppers (originally Columbian exchange crops) into widespread use, while post-Ottoman population exchanges — particularly the 1923 Lausanne Convention — reshaped regional food cultures through the displacement and mixing of Greek, Armenian, Kurdish, and Anatolian Turkish communities. The Republican period institutionalized a "Turkish national cuisine" identity, though scholars such as Sami Zubaida have noted the contested and plural nature of that construction.
Geographic Scope
Turkish cuisine is practiced across all of Turkey's seven geographic regions, each exhibiting meaningful local variation (e.g., the olive-oil-dominant Aegean, the anchovy-centric Black Sea, and the intensely spiced southeastern Gaziantep school). Significant diaspora communities in Germany, France, the Netherlands, and Australia sustain and adapt the tradition internationally.
References
- Zubaida, S., & Tapper, R. (Eds.). (1994). Culinary Cultures of the Middle East. I.B. Tauris.academic
- Fragner, B. (1994). Social reality and culinary fiction: The perspective of cookbooks from Iran and Central Asia. In S. Zubaida & R. Tapper (Eds.), Culinary Cultures of the Middle East (pp. 63–71). I.B. Tauris.academic
- Işın, P. M. (2009). Bountiful Empire: A History of Ottoman Cuisine. Reaktion Books.culinary
- Bilgin, A., & Samancı, Ö. (Eds.). (2008). Turkish Cuisine. Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Turkey.institutional
Recipe Types (148)
Mary's Perfect Turkey Dressing
Meat filling
Mediterranean Turkey and Eggplant Stir-fry
Mercimek Salatasi
Mesquite-grilled Turkey Tenderloins
Mina

Muhammara

Olive Garden Chicken and Gnocchi Soup
Open-faced "Turkey" Sandwiches with Golden Gravy
Open-face Turkey Sandwiches
Orange-glazed Chicken I
Pancar Salatasi
Perky Turkey

Phyllo dough

Phyllo Pies

Pistachio Chicken

Potatoes stuffed with Meat

Ramadan Kebab
Rice Mozzarella

Rice Pilaf
Roasted Red Pepper Spread or Dip

Roast Turkey
Roast Turkey with Corn Bread Stuffing
Sac Kavurmasi
Safak
Savory Turkey with Dressing

Shakshouka

Shish Kebab

Sis Kebabi
Sloppy Garden Joes
Slow-cooked Garlic Turkey
Slow Cooker Tex-Mex Turkey Wraps
Smoked Turkey Broccoli Calzones
Smokehouse Turkey Panini

Spaghetti with Turkey Meat Sauce

Stuffed Eggplant
Teriyaki Turkey Meatballs
Thai Turkey
Thanksgiving No Turkey "Turkey"
Thanksgiving Turkey Coating
Timely Turkey Tostadas
Tofu Fettuccini
Tomato, Bean and Spinach Salad
Tourshi
