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A definitive guide to bread and all its variations in Turkey | Daily Sabah - Daily Sabah

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No one can deny that Turks love to have freshly baked bread adorn the dining table at every meal, and local bakeries all over the country continue to keep the tradition alive, producing breads of many kinds in all shapes and sizes. Lines build up in front of bakeries at sunset during the holy month of Ramadan when a special type of "pide" bread is prepared. During the coronavirus-related lockdowns, bakeries drove around neighborhoods to provide fresh bread for those stuck at home. Meanwhile, elsewhere in the world, toilet paper may have been the hot commodity, but in Turkey the items that left shelves bare in markets were flour and yeast, a testament to their love of breaking bread over a meal.

Traditional white bread is the most consumed type of bread in Turkey. (iStock Photo)
Traditional white bread is the most consumed type of bread in Turkey. (iStock Photo)

Undoubtedly, the most popular bread consumed in Turkey is “somun ekmek,” an airy and basic white flour bread formed into an oblong-shaped loaf with pointed tips, which is cut into slices and placed in bread baskets on tables throughout the country. With a consistency similar to French bread, there is also a whole wheat version of this loaf that is widely available and referred to as “kepekli.”

A range of breads, including classic white bread loaves (top) and Trabzon bread (bottom) are seen at a bakery in Buldan, Denizli, southwestern Turkey. (iStock Photo)
A range of breads, including classic white bread loaves (top) and Trabzon bread (bottom) are seen at a bakery in Buldan, Denizli, southwestern Turkey. (iStock Photo)

“Trabzon” or “tava ekmeği” is also a white flour bread made from sourdough that is hearty and square-shaped and cut into large slices that can be used for sandwiches and can be seen served at restaurants. Most bakeries will also bake fresh rye loaves in a similar shape, which are referred to as “çavdar” as well as a plain cornbread, called “mısır ekmeği, which is a staple in Black Sea cuisine.

 Breads such as lavaş or bazlama are cooked on shallow metal domes called
 Filling her yufka sheets with cottage cheese and spinach, a woman makes a traditional Turkish gözleme.(iStock Photo)

Turkish cuisine is famed for its flatbreads, which can be broken down into two different types, namely pide and lavaş. The “pide ekmeği” should not be confused with the pita bread that separates in the middle, but more on that is to come. Nor should “pide ekmeği” be mixed up with “pide,” the oblong-shaped flatbread covered with various cheese and meat toppings similar to a sauceless pizza. Pide ekmeği is an airy thick leavened flatbread baked in circular or oblong shapes that have a baklava-design indentation throughout the top of it. While variations are always on offer at local bakeries, the specific “Ramazan pidesi” is always baked in a round circle with sesame and nigella seeds sprinkled on top.

Lavash, spelled “lavaş” in Turkish, is the other type of flatbread widely available in Turkey, and unlike the pide, which is always leavened, it is also prepared unleavened and can be baked in a tandoori oven or on a “sac,” which is a circular iron plate predominantly used by the rural population to make bread. There's also gözleme, which is seen at tourist stops all over the country and made from phyllo dough that is stuffed with fresh greens, cheese or potatoes. There is a fine line between phyllo dough, referred to as “yufka” in Turkish and lavash, which is just that precisely. The thinner thoroughly rolled out sheet of dough is yufka, while lavaş is thicker, circular and can double as a tortilla.

 Decorated with sesame and nigella seeds, the Ramazan pide is a staple food in Turkey. (iStock Photo)
 Boyoz is a Turkish pastry associated with Izmir and usually consumed with a side of tea and hard-boiled eggs. (iStock Photo)

Not all lavashes are one and the same. While some are used as casings for wraps, such as for the ever-prevalent döner dürüm, other lavashes are more oblong in shape and cooked in a tandoori oven or a clay oven, such as at "ocakbaşı style" grill restaurants, which prepare them to puff up, creating a central pocket similar to the pita bread, which is served at these establishments accompanied by butter and "tulum cheese."

A street vendor sells simit on Istiklal Street in Taksim, Istanbul, April, 17, 2011. (iStock Photo)
A street vendor sells simit on Istiklal Street in Taksim, Istanbul, April, 17, 2011. (iStock Photo)

Bazlama is a large, round, stovetop-cooked bread similar to an English muffin, which is prevalent in Central Anatolia. Pişi are pockets of fried bread dough that are distributed as gifts to family, friends and neighbors in local households in the Aegean region that have begun to gain popularity as a breakfast bread with some chic hotels even adding the puffy pockets of golden goodness to their breakfast bread baskets. There is also, of course, “simit,” which is a circular bread with no center encrusted in sesame seeds and is sold at bakeries and by street vendors. Perhaps the fanciest of breads prepared in Turkey is the "paskalya çöreği," a sweet Easter bread that is made year-round at bakeries and includes both mahlab and mastic.

 The purple bread craze has caught on nationwide, with many bakeries now producing purple baked goods in all shapes and sizes. (DHA Photo)
 Getting its color from fruits and vegetables, purple bread offers a healthier alternative to white bread. (DHA Photo)

A new bread in town

Have you heard about “purple bread” yet? It is the newest innovation in superfoods and happens to be healthier to digest and more nutritious than beloved bread and other baked products. It is even hitting the shelves in shops throughout Turkey. First invented by a professor in Singapore, “purple bread” contains flour enriched with anthocyanin, a purple pigment that occurs in fruits and vegetables such as grapes, purple carrots and sweet potatoes. The bread prepared from this flour is enriched with cancer-fighting antioxidants and fibers which means it is digested 20% slower than regular white bread, thus increasing its level on the glycemic index and making it a much healthier bread option for those with diabetes. This newest trend in nutrition has also been adopted in Turkey with developers and producers popping up all over the country, including in Sivas, Malatya and Istanbul, the latter of which is where Turkey’s first-ever “mormiks” were developed by Istanbul University’s Biotechnology Department after 12 years of research. Whether prepared using fortified flour or by adding the juice of purple produce to the bread recipe, no matter how you put it, purple bread appears to be the newest trend on the rise.

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