Tag: Spice Market

  • Top 5 things to do in Istanbul

    Top 5 things to do in Istanbul

    Istanbul is one of those cities that leaves everyone who’s been there hankering to go back. But if you’re about to make your first appearance, here are five things you won’t want to miss.

    Istanbul’s Blue Mosque. Photo / Megan Singleton

    1. Aya Sofia or Hagia Sophia – This is the most breathtaking building in all of Istanbul. Originally built as St Sophia orthodox cathedral in the 6th century, it had the largest dome in all of Christendom and pure gold mosaics on the walls. In the 15th century it became a mosque and Muslim symbols were added. Today it is a museum with artefacts and mosaics dating to its beginning.

    2. The Grand Bazaar – This 600 year old market is a maze of 60 covered streets crammed with 5000 vendors selling everything from antique rugs, glass lamps, ceramic bowls, leather coats, jewellery, cushion covers and more. Get your game face on and prepare to haggle – over a cup of hot apple tea. But the quality of goods can be amazing. Remember, the old adage is true, you get what you pay for. Oh, and James Bond rode his motorbike through here on Skyfall.

    3. The Spice Market – Start here for your first foray into the world of doing business Turkish style.

    It’s smaller than the Grand Bazaar but no less skill is demanded. You’ll find piles of dried spices and tea and plenty of fresh Turkish delight and other shops selling some of what the Bazaar sells. But the best thing is, you can declare your vacuum-packed spices and bring them home.

    4. The Blue Mosque – The main mosque in Istanbul, Sultan Ahmed Mosque, is located near Aya Sofia in the tourist area of Sultanahmet. Nicknamed for its 20,000 handmade blue Iznik tiles, this is the mosque that pilgrims try to get to once in their lifetime. The public can enter and take photos. Scarves are provided for women and shoes are carried in plastic bags.

    5. A Turkish Bath – Probably the most eye-popping experience you can have as a traveller. Pay for the works including the bath, massage and hair wash and prepare to leave your modesty at the door as you are scrubbed with a mitt by a middle-aged Turkish woman (in the women’s hamam that is), soaped up like a car and sloughed down with bowls of warm water until your skin is soft and smooth.

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    – nzherald.co.nz

    By Megan Singleton

    via Top 5 things to do in Istanbul – Travel – NZ Herald News.

  • A Walk Through Istanbul’s Spice Bazaar | The Daily Meal

    A Walk Through Istanbul’s Spice Bazaar | The Daily Meal

    Eat Your World’s favorite items in Turkey’s best spice market

    By Laura Siciliano…

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    Credit: Laura Siciliano-Rosen / Eat Your World

    Eat Your World spotlights regional foods and drinks around the globe, from New York to New Delhi.

    It’s true we’re biased toward food markets, but the Grand Bazaar — with its expensive gold jewelry, leather jackets, and endless rows of mass-produced evil-eye tchotchkes — just wasn’t our thing. Much more fun and interactive was the Misir Çarsisi, or Spice Bazaar, aka the Egyptian market, established in Eminönü in 1664 (it once specialized in goods brought from Egypt). It’s the market you walk smack into if you approach the Old City from the Galata Bridge, as we did most days from our home base in Karaköy.

    Over the years, the spice market has become plenty tourist-friendly; in fact, some of those same Grand Bazaar tchotchkes have shown up between the nuts, olives, Anatolian honey, and lokum (Turkish delight) here. Someone who knows the market well will warn you that not all vendors are created equal, which surely goes without saying in any popular market. But half the fun is going there and figuring it out for yourself — most of the vendors encourage sampling, so you can taste all the goods before you buy.

    We admit we let ourselves go a bit inside the spice market, buying dried fruit and accepting hunks of cheese without recording prices or even paying much heed to vendor names (for shame!). What we do have are some photos of favorite items and the remaining piece of pestil (fruit leather) we “forgot” we had in our luggage.

    Spices

    As its name suggests, this market specializes in spices, with cumin, cinnamon, sumac, paprika, mint, coriander, curry powder, Iranian saffron, several types of pepper — black, white, red, whole, or ground — and more competing for display space in a riot of color. Tea drinkers might skip the packaged apple tea sold everywhere for the dried hibiscus, jasmine flowers, lemon, vanilla, and delicate dried rosebuds peddled at these stands, too.

    Nuts

    If you spend more than 10 minutes in Turkey, you’ll know that nuts are big here. Actually, scratch that; they passed out bags of Turkish hazelnuts (findik) on the Turkish Airlines flight. Pistachios and hazelnuts are among the native nuts you’ll find in spades at this market, joining almonds, pine nuts, and flavored or candied nuts. These are good ones to try before you buy, as most of the nuts are shelled and freshness can be an issue.

    Dried Fruit

    Dried fruit proved an indispensable road-trip item, ideal for a quick hit of sugar when the craving struck. Papaya, guava, kiwi, pineapple — clearly these were not all local fruits, but we loved them nonetheless, especially the super sweet strawberry (çilek) and chewy apple (elma). They weren’t the cheapest purchase, but the bag we bought inside this market lasted us a full week of driving around Turkey. Note that customers often just reach right down and pick up a piece from the bin to taste; if you’re buying, you might request the fruits under the top display layer.

    Lokum

    Turkish delight (lokum) was one of the biggest surprises for us in Turkey, as our expectations, based on the ho-hum jellied squares we’ve tried elsewhere, were pretty low. In Istanbul is a whole new world of lokum that starts with your basic sugar-dusted sade (plain) and rose; graduates to lemon, mint, and chocolate, coated in coconut; and moves on to the pistachio- and hazelnut-studded, adding a layer of crunch to the logs of chewy sweetness. Available in a rainbow of colors and shapes, lokum is among the most photogenic of Turkish foods, and the spice market proved a great place to taste a few new flavors freely.

    Cheese

    These vendors are set up on the outside perimeter of the market, ready to slice off samples from huge white blocks of peynir, or cheese. Whether you like yours salty, crumbly, mild, or stringy, it’s a must-stop for any cheese fan.

    Fruit Döner, Pestil, Sucuk

    One of our favorite bites was shaved off what’s called a fruit döner, a vertical block of fruit paste studded with nuts (say, pomegranate with pistachio); like its much more common meat counterpart, it is sliced off in thin pieces with a knife. Also look out for pestil, or dried and pounded sheets of “fruit leather” — the thin, plastic-wrapped apricot variety we bought tasted like a more natural Fruit Roll-Ups from our youth — and its sausage-shaped cousin, cevizli sucuk, not to be confused with actual sucuk, which is a spicy sausage. This fruit-and-nut version consists of a string of walnuts (cevizli) dipped in a jelly of thickened grape must, with the end result — a long stick of chewy fruit and crunchy nuts — tasting better than it surely sounds.

    Laura Siciliano-Rosen is the co-founder of Eat Your World, a website that spotlights regional foods and drinks around the globe. Follow Eat Your World on Twitter @eat_your_world.

    via A Walk Through Istanbul’s Spice Bazaar | The Daily Meal.

  • Can you find poison that kills in a modern day Istanbul market?

    Can you find poison that kills in a modern day Istanbul market?

    During the Ottoman Empire, no fewer than 19 Sultans were assassinated. So when the Sultans slept in Topkapi Palace, he was inclined to keep one eye open. Everyone around him was a potential enemy – a traitorous vizier, a jealous wife, or an ambitious son could all have a motive to kill them. Join crime novelist – and expert in all things Sultan – Jason Goodwin, as he takes us on a tour of Istanbul’s ancient spice market, in search of a poison fit to kill a Sultan.

    Watch Museum Secrets: Inside the Topkapi Palace Museum on History Television this Thursday at 10 PM to find out why so many Sultans were murdered and what the perfect way to murder them was.

    via Can you find poison that kills in a modern day Istanbul market? | Musem Secrets.

  • Istanbul’s Best Street Markets

    Istanbul’s Best Street Markets

    By Anita Choudhary

    As well as being the most populous city in Turkey, Istanbul is also known as the country’s cultural and financial center. It is referred to as the bridge between the Asian and European continents as it is situated on both sides of Bosphorus Strait which links the Black Sea with the Marmara Sea. In 2010, Istanbul was listed as one of the three cultural capitals of Europe. The city is also the home of some excellent shopping opportunities. Listed below are some of Istanbul’s best street markets to explore when visiting the city.

    photo by echiner1
    photo by echiner1

    Spice Bazaar – since 1664, the Eminönü Egyptian Spice Bazaar has been referred to as a gastronomic paradise by those who enjoy the use of numerous spices while practicing their culinary expertise. This is the best place for finding a number of different food items and spices seven days a week. Here you will find a wide variety of dried fruits, essences, nuts, oils, and olives while the air is filled with the scent of Mehmet Efendi coffee that has just been freshly ground.

    Fatih Çarşamba Market – located in one of the more conservative areas of Istanbul, this Wednesday-only affair features brand name clothing, cured meats, eggs, fruits and vegetables, and all types of gadgets, all of which can be purchased at extremely affordable prices. The market is not for the faint of heart as it is a disorganized and unruly affair where it is not uncommon to see numerous vendors standing atop their product tables and bellowing out the prices of their items.

    Inebolu Sunday Market – located in the Kasimpaşa district of grimy downtown Beyoğlu, this is what would easily be called the traditional culinary carnival of Anatolia. You will find numerous booths laden with bins of olives, bright and colorful flowers, chunky corn bread slabs, eggs by the crate, fragrant herbs by the bushel, and sacks filled with grains, hazelnuts, or walnuts. It opens at 6 am and oftentimes closes by 4 pm.

    Yeşilköy (green village) Market – if you’re searching for a street market that operates at a less frantic, more relaxed pace, Yeşilköy is just the ticket. Greenery is abundant and this Wednesday-only venue has the reputation of only offering the finest, high-quality items at the most reasonable prices possible. There are 2,000 vendor stalls and the market even has toilet facilities if you need them. Additionally, there is tea cafés located throughout the market when you want to take a break from all the browsing.

    Çarşamba – The Wednesday market, better known as Fatih Çarşamba has a huge fruit, branded clothes, vegetables, gadgets, eggs and cured meat at amazingly low rates. Although it is extremely interesting, all of the sellers sell on tables in bags but completely disorganized and chaotic. But it is mostly a locals market, you need to bargain and haggle to get a good deal. .

    via Istanbul’s Best Street Markets | Venere Travel Blog.

  • Market to Pantry #26: Spice Market and Grand Bazaar, Istanbul, Turkey

    Market to Pantry #26: Spice Market and Grand Bazaar, Istanbul, Turkey

    From Nathan, in Seattle:

    In November 2009 I visited Turkey on a scouting trip for a guided tour of Biblical sites. I was impressed with the beauty, the people, and not least of all the food. We had a couple of days at the end of the trip to visit Istanbul and it blew my mind. There were a few highlights, including the Basillica Cistern and the Hagia Sophia, but the Grand Bazaar and Spice Market proved to be the kind of places where I wish I’d had much more time to explore.

    If I were to quickly describe both markets I’d say that the Grand Bazaar (in the top photo) was slightly more “touristy”, but also much larger and with a wider range of things to purchase. The sheer scope of that market was daunting. I remember standing at one crossroads; I could look in all four directions and see literally no end to the rows of shops. It makes Pike Place Market here in Seattle look like a 7-11.

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    The Spice Market was a little smaller, though still quite large, and it had more of a food focus. My impression was that it was where more of the locals did their shopping. In such a competitive environment the merchants are eager to be friendly, serve you free tea, and strike a deal.

    Our guide had a particular favorite spot (which undoubtedly gave him kickbacks) and the actual process of shopping for the spices was quite fun. My wife gave me a list of some specifics she wanted me to bring home, which I did, but also added a few others based on what I tasted and liked. I can’t remember the exact prices of each, but wild saffron from the mountains of Turkey, for example, was maybe a tenth of the price of something similar in the States…IF you were able to find it here.

    I made my selections and the merchants put them all in vacuum-sealed bags. I also purchased some dried fruits and nuts for the long flight home, which turned out to be an inspired and delicious decision. Later I realized the sheer volume of what I had purchased and considered the complexity of getting this through customs. To my relief the people at customs in both Turkey and the U.S. didn’t even raise an eyebrow at the spice haul, and I made it home with no issues.

    In the nearly two years since then we’ve run through most of what I brought back. With the delicious range of concoctions my wife has made in that time using the spices, it’s starting to feel like another trip to Istanbul might be in order soon — this time with a bigger suitcase.

    via Market to Pantry #26: Spice Market and Grand Bazaar, Istanbul, Turkey – The Perfect Pantry®.