Turecké Kadınbudu Köfte s rýží a křupavou vaječnou polevou
Kadınbudu Köfte is a classic Turkish pan-fried meatball made with minced meat, cooked rice, onion, parsley, flour, and beaten egg. The name is often translated as “lady’s thigh köfte,” a literal rendering that reflects its oval shape rather than any modern menu language. Sources on Turkish food describe the dish as part of the broad köfte family, with rice used…
Izmirské köfte s bramborami, rajčaty a paprikami
İzmir Köfte is one of Turkey’s most familiar home-style meatball dishes: oval köfte cooked with potatoes, tomatoes, green peppers, and a tomato-based sauce until the meat softens, the potatoes absorb the cooking juices, and the top of the pan turns lightly browned. It is often linked with İzmir, the Aegean city on Turkey’s west coast, and is sometimes referred to…
İnegöl Köfte: Turecké grilované masové kuličky ve stylu Bursa
İnegöl Köfte is one of Turkey’s most recognized regional meatballs, closely tied to İnegöl, a district of Bursa in northwestern Turkey. Unlike many köfte recipes that rely on cumin, black pepper, parsley, garlic, or pul biber, this version is known for restraint. The meat is the main flavor. The seasoning is spare. The texture is the point. Turkey’s Bursa tourism…
Turecké köfte s cibulí, bylinkami a teplým kořením
Köfte is one of Turkey’s most familiar everyday meat dishes: minced meat seasoned with onion, herbs, and spices, shaped by hand, then grilled, pan-seared, baked, or simmered depending on the cook, region, and meal. The name appears across a wide family of dishes, from simple grilled patties to sauced versions and bulgur-based forms; Turkey’s culinary literature records many local köfte…
Hünkâr Beğendi: Turecký jehněčí guláš na krémovém pyré z pečeného lilku
Hünkâr Beğendi is one of the best-known dishes linked with Ottoman-style Turkish cooking: cubes of tender lamb or beef spooned over a warm, creamy purée made from fire-roasted eggplant, butter, flour, milk, and kaşar cheese. The Turkish name is commonly translated as “the sultan liked it,” a phrase that points to the dish’s long association with palace cooking and formal…
Alinazik Kebab: Maso ve stylu Gaziantep s uzeným jogurtem z lilku
Alinazik Kebap, often written Ali Nazik or Alinazik Kebabı, is one of the best-known meat-and-eggplant dishes from Gaziantep, a city whose food culture holds a central place in southeastern Türkiye. The Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism’s Culture Portal lists Alinazik Kebabı among Gaziantep’s traditional foods, while GoTürkiye includes Alinazik among the city’s notable tastes. The dish is built from…
Tas Kebap: Klasický turecký guláš s rýží Pilav
Tas Kebap, or Tas Kebabı, is one of the steady, familiar meat dishes of Turkish home cooking and lokanta cuisine. It is not a grilled kebab on skewers. It is a slow-cooked stew of cubed beef or lamb, onions, tomato paste, butter or oil, and mild spices, served with rice pilav so the grains catch the glossy, savory sauce. Regional…
Tandoor Kebab: Jemné anatolské pomalu pečené jehněčí
Tandır Kebap is one of Turkey’s most respected slow-cooked lamb dishes, rooted in the older Anatolian practice of cooking meat with steady heat in a tandır, a deep clay oven or pit. In traditional settings, lamb is suspended or placed near radiant heat, then cooked for hours until the muscle fibers soften, the fat melts into the meat, and the…
Beyti kebab s rajčatovou omáčkou a česnekovým jogurtem
Beyti Kebap is a Turkish minced meat kebap served in a style closely tied to modern Istanbul restaurant culture: seasoned lamb or beef is shaped onto skewers, grilled or broiled, wrapped in thin lavaş, sliced into neat rolls, then finished with warm tomato sauce and cool garlic yogurt. The dish is widely described as ground beef or lamb grilled on…
Recept Cag Kebab (Erzurum Jehněčí Kebab)
Cağ Kebap, often written in Turkish as Cağ Kebabı, is one of the defining lamb dishes of Erzurum in eastern Turkey. It is made from slices of lamb that are seasoned with onion, salt, and black pepper, stacked on a horizontal spit, roasted near live fire, then cut onto small skewers called cağ. The dish is closely tied to Erzurum…

