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 Howcookingworks recently toured through Turkey to explore their
local food cuisine and to learn what cooking techniques the Turkish use
to express their food. What is really great about food is there is no
end to the diversity. Any new food or restaurant you go to is an
opportunity to learn something about new compositions or techniques.
With that said, we are going to do some analysis on what we've learned
and highlight some of the core dishes found in local restaurants.
The Turks Have an Awesome Control of Heat:
 In
Turkey, a lot of restaurants only primarily have a coal grill or oven.
In fact, many kebaps are cooked over a coal oven without a grill!
Cooking with coal is a lot more difficult than using a gas or electric
oven. You have to constantly play with the charcoal to watch the heat
and play with positions of the meat to ensure everything cooks evenly.
Just think about the last time you had a bbq over charcoal, and imagine
you had to do that everyday.
Now the positive tradeoffs are
pretty good. The Turks don't just use regular charcoal. They seem to
use charcoal with other woods (perhaps maple and such.. I'm not exactly
sure). What happens is the meat and ingredients absorbs a subtle smoky
and nicely aromatic flavor from the charcoal and wood. There is no way
you can get that from a gas or an electric oven. Turkish Cuisine Still Remains.. Turkish In
many of the major city centers, you won't find a diversity of ethnic
foods such as Asian, Mexican, American, French, etc. Turkish food
probably resembles their food of the past. There is a lot of meat in
their cuisine, especially lamb. You definitely won't see things like
tofu or fish sauce in their cuisine (although it poses interesting fusion scenarios..)
Checkout our video and picture food higlights!
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