Turkish Delights: Our First Bite of Turkish Cuisine
Then came the Pide and Adana kebabs. Pide (RMB 98) is a crispy, deliciously cheesy, elongated version of the pizza, divided into four sections and respectively topped with spinach, beef, cheese, and Kiymali, a kind of ground meat. The beef section was our favorite and my sister tried to steal my slice.
The assorted kebab plate (RMB 98) was the perfect introduction to Turkish meats. Contrary to what the name suggests, Adana kebabs do not come on sticks. Instead, the slices of beef, chicken, and lamb are laid out on a platter. The chicken kebab was so tender you hardly even had to chew it. The two of us wolfed it down, despite our promise to save a bite for our dad when he came to pick us up.
But it was the lamb that blew us away! The Turkish styled lamb (RMB 108) is slow-cooked for five hours before being covered in an array of spices and served with a special Turkish rice called bulgur pilaf. The outside skin is deliciously crisp and salty, pairing excellently with the tender meat and rice. I never appreciated the phrase “the meat came right off the bone” until our server took the lamb leg in one hand, a spoon in the other, and separated tender meat from bone in one smooth stroke.
We were in food heaven.
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It is because of the sacrifices made by restauranteurs like Annayev and countless dream-seekers like him that we don’t need to leave our homes but can still travel the world, through the diversity of food in our own city.
Thanks to them, we can afford to forget about the pandemic (even if it’s just for a few hours). That’s the power of a good meal. Even my little sister understood that. She said it so well: “For a second I thought everything went back to normal.”
Turkish Feast
115, 1/F, Shang, 20 Xinyuan Xili, Chaoyang District
朝阳区新源西里20号金尚一层115号 (6468 8321)
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Photos: Uni You
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