The New Zealand Herald

It’s a woman’s world

Female chefs are leading the way in Istanbul, writes Anya von Bremzen

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No bigger than chickpeas and blanketed with tangy yoghurt and sizzling spiced butter, the manti were so good, they could be inhaled by the dozen. My partner, Barry, and I devoured these lamb-filled Turkish dumplings, shaped into cute tufted shells, at Hatice Anne Ev Yemekleri, a homey spot in Istanbul’s Kuzguncuk neighbourh­ood.

“There are so many unsung female cooks in this city,” said Benoit Hanquet as we saluted Merve Ataoglu, the restaurant’s kerchiefed manti-maker.

Hanquet, our guide for a culinary backstreet­s food tour of Istanbul, would later lead us on to Gule Kafe (fried doughnuts and crumbly sesame cookies) and Gunesin Sofrasi (a tasty mosaic of meze) — two more establishm­ents serving delicious treats and overseen by women.

Exploring a city through its diverse restaurant­s is always rewarding. But inspired by Hanquet’s tour, I decided on a subsequent Istanbul visit to focus just on kitchens run by talented women.

For all its glamour and internatio­nal fame, Istanbul’s food world has until recently remained patriarcha­l — all dude celebrity chefs and swaggering ustas (masters) presiding over traditiona­l specialtie­s like baklava or kebab.

“Men ran profession­al kitchens; women were expected to cook at home for their families,” local food media star and cookbook author Refika Birgul said. “But with the rise of modern fine dining culture in Istanbul, that dynamic is finally changing.”

Indeed. In the decade and a half that I’ve spent time in this city, I’ve seen a generation of female chefs emerge, quietly defining Istanbul’s sophistica­ted style of cuisine — an idiom that often involves creative takes on Anatolian ingredient­s such as yoghurt, tahini and pomegranat­e. And so, revisiting old favourites and checking out newcomers, I crossed the city in routes lit by female culinary star power.

Giritli

Istanbul’s historical peninsula, the city’s old Byzantine-Ottoman core of imperial mosques and bazaars, dominated by the magnificen­ce of the Hagia Sophia, is tourist central.

Locals, however, barely come here, unless it’s to buy wedding gold at the Grand Bazaar — or to dine at Giritli.

This modern meyhane (tavern) still feels like a delicious discovery, even after nearly two decades in business. Occupying a 19th-century Ottoman mansion and idyllic garden, Giritli is owned by pioneering chef and restaurate­ur Ayse Sensilay, whose roots are in Crete (Giritli means Cretan in Turkish).

Drawing on Hellenic family recipes and Istanbul’s multicultu­ral heritage, Sensilay constantly updates familiar flavours: Black-eyed peas, a traditiona­l Aegean ingredient, come unexpected­ly laced with tangy dried apricot slivers; cacik, a classic yoghurt dip, is packed with juicy purslane and green almonds instead of the usual cucumbers.

Giritli’s prix-fixe dinner involves a constellat­ion of meze and mains. For lunch, one can go a la carte, as we did, eating a pile of crisp fried zucchini followed by a bowl of seafoodstu­dded orzo pilaf — and then a grilled local bluefish called lufer. As we finished our dessert of caramelise­d quince, Sensilay swept in, an arty grande dame in stylish red glasses.

“When I started in the restaurant business, it was so hard for women,” she said.

“The new generation is luckier. They can now get exceptiona­l profession­al training,” she continued. “Plus, modern food styles offer more creativity — appealing to women because we are innovators and reformists by nature.” Prix-fixe dinner from 1200TL per person, or $62; lunch for two about 1800TL.

Hodan

Across the Golden Horn, the Beyoglu quarter has always been Istanbul’s party and restaurant playground. Its current culinary star is Cigdem Seferoglu, who opened Hodan in 2021 in the basement space of an elegant 1901 building. With white tablecloth­s, an open kitchen, a tree rising from the floor and contempora­ry Turkish art (including a fantastica­l origami chandelier), Hodan has the air of a glamorous indoor-outdoor brasserie.

Riffs on traditiona­l cuisines at our table included a pomegranat­e and cucumber salad crowned with a scoop of bracingly tart sour cherry sorbet, and fluffy truffled taramasala­ta on toast.

Next came grilled octopus, diced and laced with snappy green olives, and a flame-kissed pide (flatbread) topped with unctuous titbits of kokorec (that’s, umm, roasted intestines), a gutsy homage to Istanbul street food. A voluptuous tiramisu decorated with rose petals and grassygree­n local pistachios saw us off into the night, past the party kids shuffling in and out of nearby nightclubs.

Dinner for two about 1900TL.

Sankai by Nagaya

One wouldn’t think of going for Asian food in this city. Yet delicious raw-fish dishes and robata skewers can be enjoyed at Roka Galataport, overseen by the gifted executive chef, Suna Hakyemez, a veteran of the renowned Fat Duck in England.

And one evening, we took a scenic ride on the Bosporus water shuttle to the Bebek neighbourh­ood, to eat at Sankai by Nagaya. This Asian newcomer was awarded a Michelin star within eight months of its opening in March last year.

At the Bebek Hotel, we were handed a room key card to enter Sankai’s serene third-floor, 24-seat dining room with glittering watery vistas. In its open kitchen, sushi shokunin (artisan) Hiroko Shibata was flashing supernatur­al knife skills.

A protege of the Michelin-starred Japanese chef and Sankai’s mastermind, Yoshisumi Nagaya, Shibata spent years travelling around Japan sampling regional specialtie­s while working for the Japanese Navy.

After an early retirement, she pursued her fish obsession in the equally male-dominated world of sushi. “Male colleagues were so uncomforta­ble seeing me in the kitchen!” she recalled with a Although most sushi spots in Istanbul import their seafood, Shibata insists on catch that’s exclusivel­y local. Our omakase kicked off with kaiseki-style morsels, including an adorable crab-and-shrimp doughnut frosted with Black Sea trout roe.

The sashimi-course standouts were alabaster petals of pristine sea bass from the Marmara Sea and buttery nuggets of palamut (bonito). From the Aegean came the chopped fatty tuna and plump langoustin­es in Shibata’s elegant maki rolls.

After our elaborate chestnut dessert, we asked Shibata if she was learning Turkish.

“Mostly the bad words I picked up from the fishermen,” she replied.

Tasting menus from 4500TL per person.

Apartiman

North of Bebek, the leafy waterside enclave of Yenikoy was only recently a sleepy area of traditiona­l bakeries and fish restaurant­s with white-jacketed servers. Now it’s a dining destinatio­n, thanks in part to such female-run restaurant­s as the Michelin-starred Araka, and the charming Apartiman, owned by chef Burcak Kazdal and her brother, Murat.

With a citrus-scented back garden, Apartiman was converted by the Kazdals in 2017 from an old apartment building, and now buzzes nightly with young locals and food industry types. The vibe is so welcoming, strangers soon feel like regulars.

A former baker, shepherd, and butcher who lived and worked in San Francisco in the US and in England, Burcak Kazdal has an eclectic personal cooking style, inspired by travels, old cookbooks and her special suppliers.

That style was on delicious display in our appetisers of flavourful celery root roasted with pekmez (grape molasses) and miso and brightened with pickled radishes; and in the lightly smoked horse mackerel served over borlotti beans, grapes and jagged sourdough croutons that sopped up a warm vinaigrett­e underneath.

As for the eriste (traditiona­lly cut Turkish noodles) cooked in duck stock and topped with melting shreds of pulled duck and wedges of palate-cleansing persimmon, it’s the kind of soulful comfort food I’d welcome every day.

Dinner for two about 2000TL.

Given Turkey’s current rate of inflation, all prices listed in this article are approximat­e and do not include alcohol and service.

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 ?? Photos / Gozde Durusoy, the New York Times ?? Top, Chef Hiroko Shibata; above left: tiramisu with rose petals and pistachio served at Hodan; bonito tataki on potato and white fish sashimi at Sankai by Nagaya; Chef Burcak Kazdal.
Photos / Gozde Durusoy, the New York Times Top, Chef Hiroko Shibata; above left: tiramisu with rose petals and pistachio served at Hodan; bonito tataki on potato and white fish sashimi at Sankai by Nagaya; Chef Burcak Kazdal.
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