lamb – Sue's Turkish Adventures https://suesturkishadventures.com Mon, 26 Jan 2015 00:38:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.6 Turkish Food Comes to an American Town https://suesturkishadventures.com/turkish-food-comes-to-an-american-town/ https://suesturkishadventures.com/turkish-food-comes-to-an-american-town/#comments Tue, 28 May 2013 16:16:00 +0000 https://suesturkishadventures.com/turkish-food-comes-to-an-american-town/ It is ironic that just as I am preparing to move away from White Bear Lake, a wonderful Turkish restaurant is opening up within walking distance from my house. White Bear’s Black Sea restaurant will be the second link in a local chain run by Turks Çiğdem (pronounced CHEE dem) and Tolga Ata. The original Black Sea restaurant is located on Snelling Avenue across from Hamline University.That restaurant has been…

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It is ironic that just as I am preparing to move away from White Bear Lake, a wonderful Turkish restaurant is opening up within walking distance from my house.

White Bear’s Black Sea restaurant will be the second link in a local chain run by Turks Çiğdem (pronounced CHEE dem) and Tolga Ata. The original Black Sea restaurant is located on Snelling Avenue across from Hamline University.That restaurant has been in business for 12 years.

< Cigdem and Tolga met while she was studying for an MBA at Hamline. Theirs was a Minnesota romance, and they have stayed here as newlyweds, serving Turkish food to Minnesotans. Cigdem is from Ankara, Turkey’s capital city, located in the center of the country. Tolga is from Trabzon, located on the Black Sea. Most of the tea Turks love to drink is grown near Trabzon because the area is cool, damp and hilly: superb for tea plantations. Their small, spanking clean St. Paul restaurant bustles with Hamline students and faculty at noon, and in the evening people from the neighborhood and expatriates from Turkey and the Middle East dine there. The place is rated highly on Yelp. The White Bear Lake Black Sea restaurant will serve customers from nearby small businesses as well as interested residents. Turkish food is different from Arabic food, closer to Greek and other Mediterranean food. Very healthy and flavorful. One specialty is soup, and Black Sea has a superb red lentil soup called mercimek (pronounced MARE ja mek). Every Turkish family makes this soup a bit differently, but suffice to say that in addition to lentils, it contains onions, bulgur, tomato paste, pepper paste, butter, and spices.

Black Sea has a Turkish salad with olives and white cheese on the menu, and plates of lamb and chicken doner either stuffed into pita bread or served with bread on the side.  Overall, Black Sea restaurant offers 7 appetizers, 4 salads, 10 kebab choices, 4 veggie platters, 6 sandwiches, two soups, two burgers, and two desserts. There are a number of vegetarian choices.

 

I asked Çiğdem what she thinks of Minnesota. She says the long winters are difficult, and right now she misses Turkish green plums, called eriks, which are in season. But she likes Minnesotans and feels that the Twin Cities are pleasant and peaceful.

Stop in and eat at Black Sea in St. Paul or—starting in mid-June—in White Bear Lake.

737 North Snelling Avenue, St. Paul
1581 East County Road E, White Bear Lake (just east of Highway 61)

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]]> https://suesturkishadventures.com/turkish-food-comes-to-an-american-town/feed/ 6 I Love Turkish Food! https://suesturkishadventures.com/the-hidden-dangers-of-turkish-food/ https://suesturkishadventures.com/the-hidden-dangers-of-turkish-food/#comments Wed, 25 Jul 2012 14:21:00 +0000 https://suesturkishadventures.com/the-hidden-dangers-of-turkish-food/ Well, I have apparently adjusted so well to Turkish food that I am overeating. I should have known it would come to this. During my first year in Istanbul I was skeptical. I sampled but didn’t really embrace savory items such as borek and interesting desserts like kunefe and kadayif, and I tried to resist the pistachios, almonds and cashews I saw all around me. Flaky, cheesy borek With repeated exposure, however, these…

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Well, I have apparently adjusted so well to Turkish food that I am overeating. I should have known it would come to this.

During my first year in Istanbul I was skeptical. I sampled but didn’t really embrace savory items such as borek and interesting desserts like kunefe and kadayif, and I tried to resist the pistachios, almonds and cashews I saw all around me.

Flaky, cheesy borek

With repeated exposure, however, these Turkish favorites became mine as well. And added to the above list were homemade rolls kneaded with olive oil and stuffed with mild white cheese; eggplant fried with lamb and then stewed; and Circassian chicken, an intricate salad that involves bread crumbs, spices and chopped walnuts.

Over time, I learned where the very best varieties of these items are sold. That intrepidness deserves rewards — delicious ones — doesn’t it?. And so I formed some peculiar assumptions about eating in Turkey:

1. Turkish food is so healthy (All those tomatoes, all that parsley, all the dreamy melons and tiny, melt-in-your-mouth strawberries!) that I can eat as much of it as I want.

2. I walk a great deal in Istanbul, and climb hills almost daily, hills I don’t have back home. Therefore, I no longer need formal gym workouts, or jogs along the Bosphorus.

3. My Istanbul bathroom scale is in kilograms, which, as an American, I find mysterious. As long as the number is less than 100, I’m doing okay. Right?

Kunefe: shredded phyllo dough baked with mozzarella-like cheese, topped with sugar syrup and fresh pistachios

The first sign that I might be drifting in the wrong direction came recently when, getting ready to attend a wedding, I put on a dress I had worn a year ago. It was tight not just in certain places, but all over, and it took me awhile to figure out why.

Perhaps, I decided, the dry cleaners had shrunk it. I love Denial-land.

It slowly dawned on me that I should probably weigh myself. So one morning last week I stepped on my (pounds) scale here in Minnesota. It was the moment of truth, and the scale proclaimed it in black and white. I had gained nearly ten pounds.

Nut and nutty snacks — in shops everywhere

So now it’s small meals and scant snacks, and most of all, a drastic decrease in desserts.  I’m already down 2 ½ pounds—but the first few are the easiest. I’ll be depriving myself of bagels, ranch dressing and trips to the Dairy Queen for weeks.

When I get back to Istanbul, I hope I don’t fall right back into my bad habits. But if I do, I have only Turkish food to blame.

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