VEGETABLES
Along with grains, vegetables are also consumed in large quantities in the Turkish diet. The simplest and most basic type of vegetable dish is prepared by slicing a main vegetable such as zucchini or eggplant, combining it with tomatoes, green peppers, and onions and cooking it slowly in butter and its own juices. Since the vegetables that are cultivated in Turkey are truly delicious, a simple dish like this, eaten with a sizeable chunk of fresh bread is a satisfying meal for many people.
A
whole class of vegetables is cooked in olive oil. These dishes would be third
in a five-course meal, following the soup and a main course such as rice or
borek and vegetable/meat and before dessert and fruit. Practically all vegetables,
such as fresh string-beans, artichokes, root celery, eggplants, pinto beans
or zucchini can be cooked
in olive oil and are typically eaten at room-temperature. So
they are a staple part of the menu with variations depending on the season.
Then
there are the fried vegetables, such as eggplant, peppers or zucchinis, that
are eaten with a tomato or a yogurt sauce.
"Dolma" is the generic term for stuffed vegetables,
being a derivative of the verb "doldurmak" or "to fill",
it actually means "stuffed" in Turkish. There are two categories
of dolmas: those filled with a meat mix or with a rice mix. The latter are
cooked in olive oil and eaten at room-temperature. The meat dolma is a main-course
dish eaten with a yogurt sauce and a very frequent one in the average household.
Any vegetable which can be filled with or wrapped around these mixes can be
used in dolma, including zucchini, eggplants, tomatoes, cabbage and grapevine
leaves. However, the green pepper dolma
with the rice stuffing, has to be the queen of all dolmas. A royal feast to
the eye and the palate...
In addition to these general categories, there are numerous meat and vegetable dishes which feature unique recipes. When talking vegetables, it is important to know that the eggplant(or aubergine) has a special place in the Turkish Cuisine. This handsome vegetable with its brown-green cap, velvety purple skin, has a richer flavour than that of its relatives found elsewhere. At a party, a frustrating question to ask a Turk would be "How do you usually cook your eggplant? " A proper answer to this question would require hours!
Here,
too, it will have to suffice to mention two eggplant dishes that are a must
to taste. In one, the eggplant is split lengthwise and filled with a meat
mix. This is a common summer dish, eaten with white rice pilaf. The other
one is " Her Majesty's Favourite", a delicate formal dish that is
not easy to make but well worth trying.. The name refers to Empress Eugeine,
the wife of Napoleon III, who fell in love with it on her visit to Sultan
Abdulaziz.
To taste these dishes, look for a "Lokanta". Borrowed from the Italian "Locanda", the type of establishment where traditional cooking is prepared most usually for those who work nearby.
Ottoman
Cuisine * Mezes
( Starters) * Sea
Food * Vegetables
Sweets
* Drinks