|
|
What is the food
like?
For those who travel in
culinary pursuits, Turkish Cuisine is a very curious one. The variety of dishes
that make up the Cuisine, the ways they all come together in feast-like meals,
and the evident intricacy of each craft offer enough materials for life-long
study and enjoyment. It is not easy to discern a basic element or a single
dominant feature, like the Italian "pasta" or the French "sauce". Whether in a
humble home, at a famous restaurant, or at a dinner in a Bey's mansion, familiar
patterns of this rich and diverse Cuisine are always present. It is a rare art
which satisfies your senses while reconfirming the higher order of society,
community and culture.
A practical-minded child watching Mother cook "cabbage dolma" on a lazy, grey
winter day is bound to wonder who on earth discovered this peculiar combination
of sautéed rice, pine-nuts, currants, spices, herbs and all tightly wrapped in
translucent leaves of cabbage all exactly half an inch thick and stacked-up on
an oval serving plate decorated with lemon wedges? How was it possible to
transform this humble vegetable to such heights of fashion and delicacy with so
few additional ingredients? And, now can such a yummy dish possibly also be good
for you? The modern mind, in a moment of contemplation, has similar thoughts
upon entering a modest sweets shop in Turkey where "baklava" is the generic
cousin of a dozen or so sophisticated sweet pastries with names like twisted
turban, sultan, saray (palace), lady's navel, nightingale's nest. The same
experience awaits you at a "muhallebi" (pudding shop) with a dozen different
types of milk puddings.
One can only conclude that the evolution of this glorious cuisine was not an
accident. Similar to other grand cuisines of the world, it is a result of the
combination of three key elements. A nurturing environment is irreplaceable.
Turkey is known for an abundance and diversity of foodstuff due to its rich
flora, fauna and regional differentiation. And the legacy of an Imperial Kitchen
is inescapable. Hundreds of cooks specializing in different types of dishes, all
eager to please the royal palate, no doubt had their influence in perfecting the
cuisine as we know it today. The Palace Kitchen, supported by a complex social
organization, a vibrant urban life, specialization of labor, trade, and total
control of the Spice Road, reflected the culmination of wealth and the
flourishing of culture in the capital of a mighty Empire. And the influence of
the longevity of social organization should not be taken lightly either. The
Turkish State of Anatolia is a millennium old and so, naturally, is "the
cuisine." Time is of the essence; as Ibn'i Haldun wrote, "the religion of the
King, in time, becomes that of the People", which also holds for the King's
food. Thus, the reign of the Ottoman Dynasty during 600 years, and a seamless
cultural transition into the present day of modern Turkey, led to the evolution
of a grand cuisine through differentiation, refinement and perfection of dishes,
as well as their sequence and combination of the meals.
It is quite rare that
all three conditions above are met, as it is in French, Chinese and Turkish
Cuisine. Turkish cuisine has the extra privilege of being at the crossroads of
the Far-East and the Mediterranean, which mirrors a long and complex history of
Turkish migration from the steppes of Central Asia (where they mingled with the
Chinese) to Europe (where they exerted influence all the way to Vienna).
All these unique characteristics and history have bestowed upon Turkish cuisine
a rich and varied number of dishes, which can be prepared and combined with
other dishes in meals of almost infinite variety, but always in a non-arbitrary
way. This led to a cuisine that is open to improvisation through development of
regional styles, while retaining its deep structure, as all great works of art
do. The Cuisine is also an integral aspect of culture. It is a part of the
rituals of everyday life events. It reflects spirituality, in forms that are
specific to it, through symbolism and practice.
Anyone who visits Turkey or has had a meal in a Turkish home, regardless of the
success of the particular cook, is sure to notice how unique the cuisine is. Our
intention here is to help the uninitiated to enjoy Turkish food by achieving a
higher level of understanding of the repertoire of dishes, related cultural
practices and their spiritual meaning. |