logo
Kebap to Kunefe: These chefs are bringing Turkish flavours to India

Kebap to Kunefe: These chefs are bringing Turkish flavours to India

Hindustan Times3 days ago

Turkish cuisine is delicious, calls for many familiar ingredients, and benefits from the precise cooking that Indian kitchens do exceptionally well. So why does a Google search for 'Turkish food in India' lead to crickets? Where are the home chefs making Jain and paneer versions of Adana kebabs? Why aren't there more döner kiosks at the mall? Why isn't pide, the stuffed flatbread, more popular? Indians are largely discovering the cuisine via one-off dishes in generic Middle-Eastern menus and weekend pop-ups. Adopting the seemingly simple cuisine isn't quite so easy, say chefs who are determined to turn the tide. Kebapci serves popular Turkish dishes like Beetroot Hummus, and Cihan Kebap.
On the cusp
In Hyderabad, six-month-old Kebapci Hills is merely the newest outpost of the 12-outlet Kebapci chain set up by Aasim Shah, 36, a onetime mechanical engineer and his brother Adeeb, 28, a former corporate lawyer. The menu features the familiar Shish Tavouk and Adana Kebap but also lesser-known delicacies such as the cheese-burst Cihan Kebap and pizza-like Lahmajoun. The brothers didn't go to culinary school, but they both loved Middle Eastern food and Turkish hospitality. And they knew meat.
'I've grown up around it,' Aasim Shah says. 'I understand cut, fat content, how different meats react to temperature.' That knowledge is critical for Turkey's precisely cooked kebabs ('Every five minutes matters,' says Aasim Shah) and for running kitchens as far apart as Chennai and the Maldives. In hot, humid regions — both India and the archipelago are 10°C to 15°C warmer than Turkey — meat spoils faster at room temperature. 'Most kitchens skip cold-storage. They assume the grill's heat will kill bacteria. That's not just short-sighted, it's dangerous.' Turkeyemek's menu includes Turkish delicacies like chicken abugannush.
Meat storage is expensive, which partly explains why Turkish and Levantine cuisines haven't yet gained widespread popularity in India. But that's only part of the story. There's also a lingering perception that the food is bland. In truth, the cuisines of Turkey, Armenia, Lebanon, and the broader Eastern Mediterranean are anything but. They're bold, spiced, richly textured.
Staying true to the recipes and techniques plays a big role in preserving that complexity. So, good kitchens import zaatar, sumac, nana pepper and thyme and grind them in-house to maintain their punch. They make engineering investments too. Meyhane Leg Rice, a dish of marinated mutton and rice slow-cooked underground for six hours, requires a custom four-and-a-half-foot oven dug into the ground, which restaurants such as Levant in Hyderabad have. Even desserts are tricky: Kunefe, the popular cheese, sugar-soaked, spun pastry is typically made in specialised aluminium trays that are not sold in India. All of it keeps prices up, and copycats at bay.
Making connections
In Kerala, Turkish national Tarik Hoça, 42, is head chef for the 15 outposts of Bab Arabia and Ali Baba & 41 Dishes. Sourcing is a challenge, he says. Local cinnamon and black pepper are perfect (they are after all exported to Turkey). But grape leaves? 'I've searched everywhere. Without them, dolma doesn't feel right.' And Indian chillies won't do for biber salçası, Turkish red chili paste. He just imports them.
But his big concern: How meat is cut. 'For Adana kebab, I need buffalo chest. It needs ribs, proper ribs, not just any bone,' he says. Indian butchers weren't used to these distinctions. 'I spent days with them, explaining which part goes where. Now, I only buy from butchers I've trained.' He also cooked the meat the way they do back home: Medium rare. 'But here, people often see red meat and panic.' So, he just cooks it through. 'You have to adapt.' Chef Tarik Hoça's specialties include the Istanbul kebab.
Bengaluru has managed to solve some of these problems. Turkeyemek is a two-year-old cloud kitchen run by Fayis Puzhakkal, 28, and Sameer Kuzhikkattil, 32. 'No one was doing everyday-accessible Turkish food,' says Puzhakkal. They started out from their home kitchen and cooked everything themselves until they could afford a chef. Their menu has grown from a humble four dishes (including ayran, a chaas-like beverage, and the no-bake biscuit cake bisküvi çek) to a solid 35, including their bestseller – Turkish pilaf.
They also made one critical decision early on: To use only fresh meat, bought daily. 'We don't freeze it, we don't store it. We cook it the same day,' Puzhakkal says. It means risking the stock running out. But it keeps costs low. 'We don't use processed ingredients. It's mostly butter, olive oil, vegetables, meat, and herbs,' he adds. So, customers associate it with healthy food and don't mind paying a little more. They clock 55 to 60 orders a day.
Taste test Chef Gokhan Eser Kesen's signature dishes include pide and Sultan Rice.
Gokhan Eser Kesen, 35, an eighth-generation chef, is the keeper of recipes that date back 750 years. He has cooked across 34 countries that were once under Ottoman rule or influence and was recently in Ahmedabad to cater a wedding. Turkish cuisine calls for a light hand with flavouring, he says. His signature dish, Sultan Rice, once served only to emperors, isn't laden with nuts, the way a Mughlai biryani is. 'The flavour comes from just butter and salt,' he says. It's both elegant and simple. It was his specialty at The Terrace, a multi-cuisine restaurant in Srinagar, where he consulted briefly.
He knows that the food of his people will have to fight a bit to stay. 'In India, street food is king,' he says. 'You can't make a proper Adana kebab if the meat has been in the sun for five hours.' But even he's serving onion and garlic-free Adana kebabs (made with veggies) at Gujarati weddings and Jain parties to adapt to regional Indian palates.
The cuisine has more in common with Indian food than most people realise, Kesen says. Turkish lavash and Kashmiri lavass are similar, right down to the leavening process. 'I even found Ottoman influences in Rajasthani food. We're like a brotherhood!' he says.
From HT Brunch, June 28, 2025
Follow us on www.instagram.com/htbrunch

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'You're not like other Indians': Woman opens up about subtle racism faced abroad, internet reacts
'You're not like other Indians': Woman opens up about subtle racism faced abroad, internet reacts

Mint

time11 minutes ago

  • Mint

'You're not like other Indians': Woman opens up about subtle racism faced abroad, internet reacts

A Reddit post by an Indian woman living abroad has struck a chord with many around the world, especially those who have faced the exhausting, often demeaning, experience of subtle or 'casual' racism. The anonymous user took to the subreddit r/nri to share her recent encounter at a spa that left her feeling stunned and unsure how to react. A white woman asked where she was from. When the poster replied 'India', the woman followed up with, 'Did you learn English after coming here? Your English is exactly like mine.' The Redditor responded calmly, saying she had spoken English all her life, but was met with an uncomfortable silence and a blank stare. 'It wasn't aggressive,' she wrote, 'but it was so ignorant… Stuff like this happens too often, and it's exhausting.' The post has triggered a wider conversation online about how Indians, and people of colour more broadly, are expected to tolerate microaggression, a term used to describe the subtle, often unintentional acts of racism or bias that chip away at one's identity and dignity. From getting ID-checked twice at concerts to being warned 'it's expensive' at salons, the woman listed incidents that many immigrants and non-white people will find painfully familiar. She also touched upon colourism, recounting how people often say, 'You're not like other Indians,' presumably because she is fair-skinned, a comment she rightly questioned: 'How is that even a compliment?' The post has since received hundreds of responses, with many Indian-origin users, as well as other people of colour, sharing their own stories and coping mechanisms. "It's expensive" is absolutely best upselling skill that sales folks have learned to make someone feel "less than" and hope they fall in the trap to buy more. It does get directed more towards immigrants. Another user wrote, "If you want to push them into the corner, just ask them very politely that you don't understand, 'I don't understand, could you please elaborate". And if they move forward, just enjoy them digging their own racist hole. Several users pointed out how such interactions often stem from a narrow or stereotypical view of India — that it's a poor, underdeveloped country where English isn't widely spoken. 'I get frustrated whenever I go in to eat alone and while I wait to get seated, I get asked "Doordash?". Has happened with me couple of times now. This flips me over. I wait to see if a white guy who walks up alone gets asked the same way. This definitely is racial profiling. May not be intentional but I tend to lose it whenever this happens," a user wrote.

'Why double standard?': Employee questions office dress code after boss bans slippers but allows crop tops
'Why double standard?': Employee questions office dress code after boss bans slippers but allows crop tops

Hindustan Times

time2 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

'Why double standard?': Employee questions office dress code after boss bans slippers but allows crop tops

A Reddit post has sparked discussion around workplace attire and perceived double standards. In a post titled 'Dresscode double standards: crop tops ok, slippers not ok', a user named @peela_doodh12 shared an incident from his workplace—a digital news company that reportedly has no official dress code—where he was instructed by his boss not to wear slippers to the office. A Redditor questioned office dress code norms after being told not to wear slippers.(Representational image/Unsplash) (Also read: Employee details ordeal of manager 'shamelessly' asking for money despite repeated refusals) 'I work at a digital news website where there's no official dress code. Some women coworkers wear crop tops that expose the navel and I have no issue with that,' the post begins. 'But here's what bothers me: I was once told by my boss not to wear slippers. My role doesn't involve attending meetings or any situation that demands formal wear. So why the double standard? If others can dress comfortably, why can't I wear slippers as long as I'm doing my job well?' Check out the post here: Mixed reactions flood the comments The post quickly attracted comments from fellow Redditors, with users weighing in from both sides of the discussion. One user sarcastically suggested, 'Go with barefoot so your supervisor will request you to wear at least slippers.' Another offered a more technical explanation: 'Slippers are dangerous during evacuations as per Health and Safety ISO standards. Your company is ensuring your safety. This is followed in all MNCs.' Yet some responses reflected personal observations and biases. 'Most of the girls who wear crop tops to the office keep pulling the dress down to cover their tummy… wonder why they chose to wear crop tops,' one commenter wrote. Others took a more neutral or supportive stance. 'People can wear anything publicly decent that they want to if there's no dress code. There's nothing wrong in that. And of course, no one wears a dirty pair of slippers to office if that's what you're imagining,' said a user. (Also read: US company demands Indian employee keep camera on during work hours. His response) However, not everyone agreed. 'Who wears slippers at office? Doesn't matter what your role is, at least respect the decorum of the place,' one Redditor argued. In defence, the original poster responded, 'Read the post. There is no dress code. Can you tell me what exactly is wrong with slippers? How does that not maintain the decorum? If I'm doing job fine how does it matter what one wears.' Another commenter added, 'I used to wear bathroom slippers to my startup, no one cared.'

The barefoot Naga in Kargil's bloodiest night
The barefoot Naga in Kargil's bloodiest night

Time of India

time7 hours ago

  • Time of India

The barefoot Naga in Kargil's bloodiest night

Chandigarh: It was the bloodiest night of the Kargil War . As dawn broke on June 29, 1999, a beleaguered Commanding Officer of the 2 Rajputana Rifles (2 Raj Rif), Col M B Ravindranath, Vir Chakra, was taking stock of the blood that had seeped into the forbidding, lifeless alpine rocks. Three of his officers and 10 other ranks had made the supreme sacrifice, 51 were wounded, including 36 critically. None more heroic of those against-all-odds actions than that of the Naga officer, Capt N Kenguruse. As the attack stalled that night, Kenguruse had barefoot launched a suicidal assault up the vertical cliff face of Lone Hill on the Drass LoC. The slippery slopes of Lone Hill had not afforded traction to his Army-regulation snow boots, so he just dumped them. But the odds were so stacked against the daredevil action that Kenguruse never got to the top. All that the Pakistani soldiers of the 6 Northern Light Infantry (SIKKIS) had to do was to push boulders off the top and onto Kenguruse and Hav. Sharman Singh, both of whom were clinging to a precipice under angled fire from the top. They plunged off the cliff, 200 feet to their deaths. Kenguruse, forever frozen in immortality at age 25, was awarded the Maha Vir Chakra (MVC) while Singh the Sena Medal (Gallantry). by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like local network access control Esseps Learn More Undo Kenguruse's fatal initiative epitomised the raw courage displayed by the Indian Infantry in the unique alpine battles of Kargil where it attacked the waiting enemy in frontal assaults and up heights ranging in excess of 19,000 feet. These were heights, terrain and such tempestuous weather, that other nations would dare send only mountaineering expeditions. But here Indian soldiers fought with blood, guts and 'jugaad' resulting in 545 deaths. The Indian soldiers had etched with their blood a saga unparalleled in the annals of super-high altitude warfare. That fateful night, Kenguruse, the indomitable Naga from Nerhema village, Kohima, was leading the battalion's Ghatak platoon (commandos) tasked by the CO to act as a protective patrol to Delta Company's infiltrating column under the command of Maj. Mohit Saxena, Vir Chakra. D Company''s assault got held up due to the steep and forbidding approach up a vertical cliff face of Lone Hill. Kenguruse seized the initiative, took off his boots, socks and clambered up the cliff. His daring assault picked a route to the enemy's position from a flank but up a vertical mountain wall. On top of Lone Hill was the enemy in section strength, entrenched in bunkers fashioned from boulders (sangers), and supported by a universal machine gun (UMG). As Kenguruse climbed to the top, he took a hit. "As the commando team scaled the cliff face, it came under intense fire, which caused heavy casualties. The officer sustained a splinter injury in his abdomen. Bleeding profusely yet undeterred, he urged his men to carry on with the displayed conspicuous gallantry, indomitable resolve, grit and determination beyond the call of duty and made the supreme sacrifice in the face of the enemy, in true traditions of the Indian Army," said the official citation for Kenguruse's MVC. A detailed account of Kenguruse's last moments supported by photographs of Lone Hill has been penned by the late Ravindranath in his memoir, 'Kargil War: The Turning Point'. The memoir is supported by first-hand accounts from (later Brigadier) Saxena, the D Company commander under whose command during the night of June 28-29, 1999, were placed Kenguruse's Ghataks. "Kenguruse's daredevil assault: Failing to find a way to Lone Hill, Kenguruse led his troops through a rock face, climbing it with bare feet and hands, and had gained a route to the top, and together, they had fought their way to the top. It was then that the enemy in desperation had pushed the stones down on this team. The rolling stones had swept this team down the precipice at the edge of which Kenguruse's team had gathered to launch a final push to the top. It was a merciless tumble for the team, resulting in the death of Kenguruse and Sharman, whose hands still held the grenade he had intended to throw," wrote Ravindranath. As Kenguruse and Singh plunged off the cliff, Delta Company's reserve platoon under Sub. Sayar Singh was still 500 metres behind. The first light of dawn June 29, 1999, was just an hour away and threatening to rob the assaulting Indian troops of the cover of darkness. It was a critical situation, as assessed by the CO, who had staged well forward into the battle. "Overall, in my assessment, Delta Company had expended itself, and despite the heroic efforts, we had yet to capture Lone Hill or succeed in capturing a tactical foothold," wrote Ravindranath. Ultimately, with the Bofors fire coming in and the 18 Garhwal Rifles launching simultaneous flanking assaults on Point 4700, the enemy panicked and vacated its battlements on Lone Hill, Three Pimples and Knoll, which were the three main objectives of 2 Raj Rif that night. Victory had come, but laced heavily with the taste of salty blood in the mouth.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store