Tag: Istanbul

  • How Sweet It Is: Destinations And Their Desserts

    How Sweet It Is: Destinations And Their Desserts

    Culinary indulgences come easy to the traveler, especially when it comes to something sweet. Most destinations have at least one signature dessert – that one confection that they do so well; that certain dish that has history in every bite. Here are six cities and their famous desserts to try:

    Turkish Delight in İstanbul

    Turkish Delight for sale in Istanbul
    Turkish Delight for sale in Istanbul

    Ali Muhiddin Hacı Bekir was the most famous of all Ottoman confectioners. He came to İstanbul from the mountain town of Kastamonu in 1777 and opened a shop in the Old City where he concocted delicious boiled sweets and the translucent jellied jewels known to Turks as lokum – and to the rest of the world as Turkish Delight. Today, locals still buy their lokum from branches of the business he began over two centuries ago.

    The flagship store of Ali Muhiddin Hacı Bekir is located near the Spice Bazaar. There are also stores on İstiklal Caddesi and in the produce market at Kadıköy. A more recent family dynasty has been established at Herşey Aşktan, opposite Pera Palace Hotel. Its delicious Turkish Delight can be packaged in decorative boxes, creating a perfect gift to take home to friends and family.

    Cheesecake in New York

    Sure, cheesecake, in one form or another, has been baked and eaten in Europe since the 1400s. But New Yorkers have appropriated its history in the form of the New York-style cheesecake. Immortalized by Lindy’s restaurant in Midtown, (which was opened by Leo Lindemann in 1921) the version served there – made of cream cheese, heavy cream, a dash of vanilla and a cookie crust – became wildly popular in the ’40s. Junior’s, which opened on Flatbush Ave in Brooklyn in 1929 (and more recently in Midtown) makes its own famous version of the creamy cake with a graham-cracker crust.

    Gelato in Florence

    During Renaissance and 16th-century Florence, two cooks made ice-cream history: Ruggeri, a chicken farmer who made it to the culinary big time thanks to a sorbet he made for Catherine Medici; and Bernardo Buontalenti, a well-known architect who produced a frozen dessert based on zabaglione (a dessert of whipped egg yolks, sugar and sweet wine) and fruit. Both are considered founding fathers of Italy‘s gelato culture. You’ll usually be asked if you want panna (cream) with your ice cream. A good call is si.

    Florentines take their gelato seriously. There’s a healthy rivalry among the local gelaterie artigianale (makers of handmade gelato), who all strive to create the creamiest, most flavorful and freshest product in the city. Flavors change according to what fruit is in season. Three of our favorites are: Gelateria dei Neri (semifreddo-style; cheaper than its competitors; wild flavors like gorgonzola); Gelateria Vivoli (tubs only – eat in the pretty piazza nearby); and Grom (a newcomer using many organic ingredients).

    via How Sweet It Is: Destinations And Their Desserts | FoxNews.com.

  • Gensler’s Istanbul theme park looks to city’s past

    Gensler’s Istanbul theme park looks to city’s past

    Gensler’s Istanbul theme park
    Gensler’s Istanbul theme park

    15 August 2011 | By Elizabeth Hopkirk

    Gensler has won a design competition for a 150ha mixed-use development in Istanbul.

    It will contain the region’s first theme park as well as residential, office, retail, and hospitality and 60ha of open spaces and parks.

    “This is a masterplanning project that essentially creates a city within a city, and we’re thrilled to be a part of it,” says Marty Borko, principal and leader of Gensler’s mixed-use practice.

    The City of Seven Gardens masterplan was inspired by Istanbul’s nickname, the City on Seven Hills.

    Turkey’s largest city, which stands at the crossroads of Europe and Asia, has a history stretching back 2,000 years.

    “As the plan developed, we kept both ’new’ and ’old’ in mind,” said design director Tom Sze.

    “We’re incorporating best practices around planning, design and sustainability – building around existing transportation routes, maximising proximity and views to the lake, creating dynamic open spaces – while respecting the region’s rich history and culture.”

    via Gensler’s Istanbul theme park looks to city’s past | News | Building Design.

  • C.C. Humphreys: Istanbul/Constantinople

    C.C. Humphreys: Istanbul/Constantinople

    Chris (C.C.) Humphreys was born in Toronto, lived in Los Angeles until he was seven, and grew up in the UK. A third-generation actor and writer on both sides of his family, Humphreys has appeared on stages ranging from London’s West End to Hollywood’s Twentieth Century Fox. As C.C. Humphreys, Chris has written six bestselling historical novels. He now lives on Salt Spring Island, B.C. with his wife and young son.

    Mustafa Ozer/AFP/Getty

    I enjoy a good blogging. (My wife suggested I substitute “f” for “b” but I said we shouldn’t air our predilections in public). I keep a blog but don’t get around to it very often. I find that when I am done with a day’s writing, the word well is usually dried up.

    What I enjoy most about a blog is the opportunity it gives to focus on an aspect of my life or my craft. (My wife suggested the phrase “pontificate about” but again I declined).

    I have always been a wanderer, from a family of wanderers. Nowadays, I wander most for my work. I have to go where my novels are set. Research for me is not so much about getting the facts right, important though that is. A fact is dry unless it is put into the context of character and action. A fact needs to be used as a springboard for imagination. And the “facts” I pick up in the place where my actions have happened usually give me the biggest bounce of all.

    This has never been more true than in my latest novel. Where would I have been without my two visits to Istanbul? The first was tacked onto my 2007 trip to Romania when I was researching my novel on the real Dracula: Vlad: The Last Confession. I was so close, why not see this fabled city? A Place Called Armageddon was not even glimmer in my mind then. I wandered about, visited all the key sites – Topkapi, Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, the Cisterns. I went out to the Theodosian walls and, knowing something of the great siege of 1453, marveled at the courage it would take to both assault and defend them. I smoked apple tobacco in narghile, played backgammon in Pera alleys, drank raki. Left, sated.

    Inspiration is often not a lightning bolt but a thing of stealth. Istanbul had me and this idea crept up. I found myself reading ever more about the place until the moment came when I knew I had to tackle 1453. Once committed, I knew I had to return. I view a place differently when I have a story in mind. Different senses operate more fully – especially the sixth one. I long ago discovered that there is a resonance in stone where extraordinary – often violent – acts have happened. Walls give off a special energy and I just have to sit still long enough near them to channel it.

    I prize imagination above most things – but imagination stimulated by the senses, grounded in geography and history… ah, there’s the ultimate! On my second visit to Istanbul I discovered a location for part of my story and the whole novel changed. I’d read about it, the tiny church of St Maria of the Mongols. It’s not on the tourist track, tucked away in the labyrinthine streets of working class Fener. I found it eventually, thanks to my Turkish publishers – who, in a wonderful example of Humphreys’ serendipity were just publishing Vlad the week I was there. (Doing a book signing in that city of words was truly one of the greatest buzzes of my life)

    It is rarely open to the public. But 20 bucks to the caretaker got us in. I gasped when I saw this exquisite jewel box with its vaulted roof, its gilt and silver ikons, its teak altar screen. It had survived the sack that followed the Turkish conquest of 1453; spared by special order of Mehmet “fatih”: the conqueror. Why? No one knows. But it is into the gap between facts that the historical novelist leaps. I was free to speculate – and did. This glorious place became crucial to my characters’ very survival and, back at my desk on Salt Spring Island, I reshaped the novel around it.

    via C.C. Humphreys: Istanbul/Constantinople | Afterword | National Post.

  • Istanbul, the city for shopping

    Istanbul, the city for shopping

    Last night Jengis introduced me to a couple that are booked on my tour, Antionette and Dee. As I arrived at my hotel from the airport I sat and had my first (and quite possibly my last) Turkish coffee while chatting with my new friends. Turkish coffee is very strong, very bitter even with a full satchet of sugar and very grainy – not an experience I found terribly pleasureable. Turkish tea however, as I found out today, is very nice; a bit sweet, but quite tasty.

    1.1314415581.more landscape

    I was booked in for a full day boat cruise around the Prince’s Islands in the Sea of Marmara today. I ended up cancelling last night as I found out the only day I could visit the Grand Bazaar (an Istanbul institution) was going to be today, as it isn’t open on Sundays. So today I joined my new friends and more on a visit to the Spice Bazaar, a cruise on the Bosphorous and a visit to the Grand Bazaar this arvo.

    The Spice Bazaar has the most lovely aroma; many of the stalls sell all types of spices, nuts, confectionery and pastries, but it is not the cleanest environment. Donna (another new friend from Melbourne) and I found a decent place to buy tea and sat until time to rejoin the group. We then boarded a wooden boat for a cruise up the Bosphorous, which is the narrow stretch of water that separates European Istanbul and Eastern Istanbul (we are based on the Euro side). Probably the most interesting of all the sites is how the landscapes are just full of building upon building.

    The Grand Bazaar is just amazing – it’s like a maze of shops and just filled with colour. A visit to this place really is an absolute must when in Istanbul. shop after shop selling pachminas, carpets, clothing, jewellery, souvenir items, and the most beautiful light and lamp shades – I would love to have bought a few, but just too fragile to be attempting to transport around. Photo’s attached don’t really do the sights and colours justice. There are so many shops all selling the same things that it gets a bit much. Plus, the men working in the shops (yes, all men, no women working at all) can be very pushy – “you come into my shop, I have something very special for you” and the like. I got my first taste at haggling prices too, and I’m sure it won’t be the last time over the next few weeks too!

    Driving around Istanbul the streets are just filled with shops – I swear I think this place would be a shoppers dream! they even have shops underneath the bridge that stretches across the river and in underpasses that run underneath the road! Coming from Perth, it’s just unreal…

    via Istanbul, the city for shopping – Istanbul, Turkey Travel Blog.

    Saledwards

  • Istanbul (Not Constantinople)

    Istanbul (Not Constantinople)

    by Nadia Alkahzrajie – Thursday August 18, 2011 2:59 pm

    DSC00516Like no other jilted capital Istanbul engulfs visitors with its razzled charms, the musk of rose petal tinged with rancid fish-heads the prelude to your renewed affections. Important things have happened in this city of minarets; here the past isn’t so much a passive resident but a restless dervish whirling down the backstreets off Taxsim square, where men smoke the hookah and sip coffee as thick and loamy as compost.

    Smoke from a hundred-thousand car exhausts breathes a black patina over Ottoman porticos, stiffening the coats of street-urchin cats so that they look permanently electrified; backlit by sunlight it hangs in a shimmering miasma above the Bosporus, Black Sea Strait, gateway to the East and home to tribes of cannibal jellyfish.

    Strung out along the Galata Bridge, fishermen pack their catch in glass bell-jars, layer upon silvery layer circled by marauding seagulls. Under the arches, horse mackerel, mullet, and turbot are blistered under a hot grill and served with plump grains of sticky, milky rice and a lemony salad. The people of Istanbul enjoy seafood so much they have a popular saying: “If I caught my father in the sea I’d eat him.”

    Sweet and juicy mussels are a popular street food, stuffed with herby tomato rice it’s an inverted kind of paella served in the shell.  Another street vendor will sell sweet corn-cobs caramelised over hot coals or chewy discs of sesame-topped bread. Bread is close to a Turks heart; they will inhale the scent from a bakery as though it was the sweetest perfume. Sometimes a little salty feta is pressed into the dense, cackey crumb, sometimes chopped black olives or chilli.

    Istanbul smells vital and ancient – a good burnished smell like the sepia pages of well-thumbed books – and the sky, a vast screen of perpetual special effects, shows a beautiful apricot lustre at dawn tinged with rose pink at dusk when the city is aglow with residual warmth.

    Breakfast involves eggs of some variety, from simple hard-boiled to more elaborate concoctions like menemen, scrambled eggs cooked with peppers, chilli and oil. Olives, cucumber and tomato will also be on offer, as will sheep’s or goat’s milk cheeses and sweet rose-petal syrup for spreading on fresh bread. Fassoulia is a popular breakfast dish made from sliced green beans stewed until silky soft with olive oil, tomato and garlic. It is usually served cold while a hot version made with creamy cannellini beans is served throughout the day.

    Like Venice and Naples, Istanbul is a city that speaks to the individual; some will remember the tranquil beauty of the Blue Mosque, others the Grand Bazaar with its fiendish traders who barter with guillotine precision, never missing their mark, but for me Istanbul is at its most evocative when approached by water. Each daily crossing of the Bosporus on a shaky ferry brings a closer, territorial intimacy as you imagine an alternative existence moving about the vast city as a native, at home with the striking exoticism.

    When I think of the customary rituals of a city where it is possible to feel fully occupied while doing nothing much, I think of the call to prayer, that archaic swell that seems to come from the mouth of the city itself, a floating layer of sound that levels everyone to listeners. I think of miniature glasses of hot, sweet tea grasped between forefinger and thumb and tumblers of anise flavoured raki turned cloud-coloured with a splash of water.

    The wide shopping avenues off Taxsim square are lined with designer shops, but wonder down the side streets into a network of vintage stores piled high with typewriters, leather trunks, birdcages and retro ephemera. Turks have a sharp eye for fashions and the days of picking up a real bargain are no more, but the narrow, ornamented buildings falling into gentle dilapidation come close to the heart of old Istanbul. Here you can listen to live gypsy fasil music, while Arabic cafes serve food with a Moorish twist such as spiced and cured meats sujuk and pastirma; salt-roasted pumpkin seeds and lupini beans; and a molten mixture of stringy cheese mixed with cornmeal that’s eaten like a fondue.

    Istanbul also has a well-established tradition of European-style coffeehouses, many specialising in wobbly milk puddings and the famous baklava – a ground paste of nuts sandwiched between layers of butter-brushed filo and drenched in rose syrup. My favourite baklava is baked in a flat sausage spiral, the creamed pistachio showing bud-green through the thinnest layer of translucent pastry. Another speciality dessert is kunefe, served from a hot pan it has a crunchy texture like shredded wheat with a filling of sweetened cream cheese, the dessert is finished with hot syrup and chopped nuts. Fruits platters feature apricots, green plumbs, figs, cherries and doote (white mulberry), while chunks of watermelon are traditionally served with cheese.

    The city has its own version of fast food restaurants, dishing up traditional food from school-dinner style canteens. These restaurants specialise in stews, stuffed vegetables such as artichoke and aubergine and the Turkish soup known as chorba, made from stock and lentils and served with a squirt of lemon. Dolma – rice-stuffed vine leaves – is very popular, and manti, tiny meat-filled dumplings covered in a yoghurt sauce, are another local favourite.

    Unlike the clods of suspiciously perspiring meat common to the UK, the doner kebab is a Turkish speciality and is usually eaten from large oval plates in seated restaurants; thin slices of spit-roast chicken or beef are placed atop chopped bread and covered in spicy tomato sauce, fresh yoghurt and olive oil. Because kebabs are usually served with hot pickles, Ayran is sold to counter the chilli burn. Ayran is a natural yoghurt drink thinned with water and a pinch of salt; it is to Turks what gazpacho is to the Spanish.

    Four times an imperial capital (Roman, Byzantine, Latin and Ottoman) the city retains an aura of great power, its ancient palaces and mosques set amongst parks landscaped with tropical flowers and neo-classical fountains. Despite the awesome antiquity Istanbul is a very hip city, not least because of its hybrid Eurasian character which puts it at the forefront of internationalism. New money is much in evidence and the city hosts many international events such as the star-studded Istancool festival, now in its second year.

    Never-the-less, Istanbul doesn’t easily concede to commercial tourism. This is a complex metropolis and the sometimes grimy patina is as much a part of its romance as the Topkapi palace. The city’s irreverent character can express itself in wily ways; in a rancid gust from an ancient drain or in the gold-toothed smile that invites you to browse without buying. Even the mosques reflecting white sunlight off their space-age aluminium domes can catch you off-guard. Over 10,000,000 people pulsate throughout this megacity and the unhurried bustle is neither threatening nor entirely benign, creating an atmosphere of imminent possibility and a feeling of having arrived right at the very centre of things.

    For stuffed mussels and fish walk along the Bosporus and under the arches of the Galata bridge.

    For fassoulia and hot cheese walk along the river road to the Dolmabahce Palace

    To smoke the hookah (water pipe), drink Turkish coffee and listen to live fasil music head to the backstreets off Taxsim square; Arabic style café Mitanni Istiklal Cadessi

    For European coffee houses and baklava, Taxsim Beyoglu

    For European style restaurants and rooftop views of the city, Galata District

    The Istancool festival runs 27th -29thMay

  • Istan-fabulous!

    Istan-fabulous!

    Grazia Travel Club has just got back from Istanbul, where we stayed at the coolest hotel in town, the W (above and below). The hotel’s Extreme Wow suite was the last hotel Amy Winehouse ever stayed in, after cancelling her Istanbul tour date earlier this year. She liked it so much she stayed holed up there for four days.

    3 8

    If you want to sleep in the same huge round bed as Amy did, with its mirror on the ceiling, perhaps sunbathe on its private terrace overlooking the Bosporus then chill in the massive jacuzzi in the bedroom, the Extreme Wow suite will set you back a cool €4,500 per night. The neighbouring Wow suite (we guarantee wow is the first thing you’ll say when you enter the door) is a snip at just €4,000, while rooms at the W start from €216 per night. Not only is the hotel, like all the Ws, totally rock ‘n’ roll but it has the best pool in the city. A short taxi ride, then a boat launch and you’re on the fabulous Suada private island, slap bang in the middle of the Bosporus with Europe to the West of you and Asia to the East – amaze!

    The crowd here is very glam and the DJ plays chilled out vibes – just perfect if you’ve been out the night before for cocktails at 360 www.360istanbul.com (stunning views of the city, beautiful people – two pics above), then on to the Reina club www.reina.com.tr the club to go to in Istanbul in the Summer, a gorgeous outdoor venue on the shores of the Bosporus.

    If you’re heading to Istanbul when it gets a little cooler in the evenings, from September onwards, it’s the W Lounge that’s the place to be seen, where you’ll be hanging out with a hip crowd of Turkish ‘A’ listers and visiting international celebs like Rhianna.

    Istan totally cool!

    – Nicholas Kynaston

    via Grazia Travel Club: Istan-fabulous!.