Thursday, December 6, 2012

Blog 15: The best of Adana Kebab 2012


Blog 15: Good bye and the best of Adana Kebab
Dec 6th, 2012

We’ll it’s time to say good bye to Adana for another year and as I do, I would like to thank all those that have contacted me whilst blogging and also those that have made me welcome whilst in Adana in 2012. I will be back, that’s one guarantee!!

I also wish to thank my fabulous parents-in-law, Salim and Mehtap for their wonderful hospitality. My wife’s mother, Mehtap is an awesome cook of traditional Turkish foods and her father Salim grows all the vegetables so easy and perfect!  So unfortunately I haven’t lost any weight in our time here this year! LEZZETLI (delicious!!!)

If it’s ok with all of you I will continue to blog about Adana (so keep checking in from time to time for new blogs) In doing these blogs I have realised just how much there is to blog about Adana!! What a wonderful place!

I have so many stories and experiences and further interesting places to blog about so stay tuned to this "aussieinadana". I have literally a library of thousands of photos to share and much more to say.

Alternatively drop in on "Adana Adventures" at (link at the top) for an authorative web site from a chap (Jake Olson) who lived here until recently. You really won't find a better site about Adana from a foreign perspective.  

I will also dedicate at least 1 blog to where I live when I arrive back home later this month, about my life in Australia so my Turkish friends can gain an insight into cultural differences.

I’m currently I’m in Istanbul for the last week of my stay in Turkey. It’s cold and wet here in Istanbul! :-/ But we are made to feel welcome by Aylin’s sister and brother-in-law so it’s nice here.








Istanbul today 6th Dec - Cold, wet, but nice still.

But for this blog I want to share my thoughts on “Mas Kebab”, my favourite Adana Kebab restaurant. Future blogs won’t cover Kebabs so intensily so this is a final critic before I return again.

Mas Kebab was the first restrurant I tasted "Adana Kebab" in 2008 and now is always the last Kebab I eat before I leave the city each year. I know I rave on about Adana Kebab’s but it’s my favourite food in Turkey, made best here in Adana so don't bother anywhere else if you see it's name. It's not a true Adana Kebab unless it's made here!! I have become a bit of an critic of what makes a good Kebab now.

Mas Kebab.
Mas Kebab, 322 453 37 65, kurtulus Mah.Mücahitler Cad.Sunaoğlu Apt. No:17 Seyhan / Adana , Kebapçı - No: 17 Seyhan / Adana Kebab





This restaurant I am told by my wife’s family started with a very humble beginning, as  a small street kebab shop but with a great taste. It has grown over the years with reputation and expanded very much from its simple beginnings. (you can see lots of old photos in the shop like this one)
What was once a humble small restaurant is now a classy, clean and over-all well-presented large restaurant offering both large outdoor and indoor seating. The restaurant even is divided into special sections for preparation like salads etc..



When you first arrive at Mas Kebab you are attended to by very well dressed waiters that check up on you often throughout the meal to see if there’s anything else they can serve you.

The seating is comfortable and the tables have a fine black marble sparkly finish that works well with the overall appearance. The ceiling and walls all finished very well to create a very stylish effect.

You will notice straight away by the introduction of Salads to the table that Mass Kebab is a “step-up” from your average Kebab restaurant. You paid for that step-up but, let me tell you, it’s worth every cent as the Kebabs here are to die for!
Don’t get me wrong, Mas Kebab is more expensive that others I have blogged about but it’s still not expensive for what you get and not like a fine French Restaurant price or meal.
(French restaurant meal = expensive, perfectly presented by a master chef, but small and super expensive, usually followed by McDonalds on the way home to fill you up! lol )

All that to say, we’ve paid a lot more in Adana for a Adana Kebab that are much inferior to this Mas Kebab.

The salads are superior and it pays off that they have a separate section dedicated to the preparation of salads. Although served salad is not quite as perfectly presented as those in the picture that’s above the counter in the entry area, they are never-the-less, very presentable.

All the right salads and all the right tastes. fresh, spiced, just right! :-)

They asked us if we wanted our Kebab spiced hot or mild and I chose mild because we were in the company of Aylin’s Father Salim, and “Baba”(father) is famous for his hot chilli’s that he grows on the his apartment balcony. They are seriously hot “aci” (ager). Just because he was with us my phycology told me this Kebab spice would be “aci” as well so I declined.

I was wrong. The Hotter lamb kebab strip was perfect, spiced so you could taste every little section you break off to wrap in your bread with salad.
But the main spice difference between hot and mild that I found was the bread. Let me tell you the mild is mild, tasty but mild. On the other hand the hot spiced bread was not so hot but, omg, totally delicious!! I found myself requesting an exchange of my mild bread for the hotter variety from my wife and then for the bread left by her mother! lol It is much better than the mild bread.

The bread was fresh, perfectly weighted in thickness. If you get a choice, take the hotter Kebab because the spice is oh so much better!!

The whole deal, salads and Kebab was very good. Higher standard for a slightly higher price. Well worth it at Mass Kebab. The dinning was great and finished off with a very refreshing glass of chi tea.

 

A very fine finish to another memorable stay in Adana.

Dinner for four, plus child and drinks, and chi 52 lira.

Service was great but I still love the extra service and personal touch made by the Park Café staff as the best service I’ve had in Adana.

Never the less, until I eat a better Kebab, Mas Kebab scored a 10/10 for me.

So this is the last Adana Blog whilst I’m actually in Turkey but there will be more from me about Adana written from my “Summer” base in Australia. That’s right folks I’m on my way back to an Aussie Summer so I’ll by-pass your wonderful cold winter! Lol


Next blog will be in about 2 weeks.

Back in Adana 2013 /14

Cheers

Andrew

Monday, December 3, 2012

Blog 14: SAHLEP The Winter drink in Adana


Blog 14: SAHLEP
A popular winter drink in Adana


When you’re talking Turkish drinks you think of Raki ( a very potent famous Turkish Alcoholic drink), Salgam (a bitter but quite savory street drink made of black carrot and a red turnips), Turkish coffee (served in tiny cups – with about half the cup filled with a strong coffee power – often used for fortune reading when the power is left in the bottom after drinking), Ayran, (a savory yogert drink that the Turks prefer to drink at their meal table over Coke), and then there’s Salep.


Sahlep (or Salep).

For this blog I will cover Salep, a milky thick, very hot and nutritious drink made from ground orchid tubers. A very popular winter drink, Sahlep is historically tied for centuries with the old Ottoman Empire.  
I will spell Sahlep as Salep because my wife insists this is the correct way. The van's all spell Salep with a "h" but you can find it online either way.

I discovered this drink at a cafe in the Grand Bazzar in Istanbul in 2007 and have loved it ever since.

In Adana this drink flourishes in epic proportions. Salep vans can be found in their hundreds all around the lake foreshores of Adana. All with their slightly different recipes, each claiming to be the best. (Salep in the Winter, Bici Bici in the summer.)


Above - The van we choose to drink from this time around. Below - an example of the many van's that are every 50 meters or so aroun the lake.








I must admit, the best Salep I have tasted was from one of these street vans. You also find Salep in many Café’s during the winter months here.


I could go on adding van pictures here but I think you got the idea - Heaps  of Sahlep vans!!

Salep is a “Must Try” in Turkey and in Adana you will find some of the best examples. My wife makes it now of a night and tonight is rainy and cold so the Salep was perfect!!

Salep is served from a very unique brass machine that is an attraction in itself. I love the look of these machines, so exotic, it take the eye!

And when it’s a cold day these Salep Machines can give off a steam that adds very much to the ambience and attraction.


 Sahlep is best served boiling hot, not like the wimpy luke-warm coffee you can expect from many Café’s back home who forever fear a law suits since McDonalds was sued successfully. Coffee is best hot and so is Sahlep! If you want a cold drink, go buy a milk shake!


Sahlap’s unique flavour comes from ground orchid bulbs and because it takes a lot of bulbs to make the power, the real stuff is expensive as hell! (excuse the language) Served with a sprinkling of cinnamon and often crushed walnuts, it’s a marvellous combination for a great Turkish drink.






It’s also considered a powerful aphrodisiac but I can’t confirm the science of that claim. Either way I’m encouraging my wife to make and consume it in large quantities! ;-) I’m not sure if it’s working!! :-/


Salep, my favourite hot drink.


Cheers

 Andrew

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Blog 13: "Adana's back streets"


Blog 13: "Adana's back streets"

Hanedan Mh, Adana


In today’s blog I just wanted to point out that there are many hidden treasures in Adana that you only find by wandering around with someone who knows the city, like my wife and her parents.


Kuruköprü Sokak (13. Sk.) is one such street. We spend a lot of money in this street because there are so many bargains to be had. There are many little gems to explore here. I will point out 5 in this blog! 5 “Aces in one pack” (5 great stores in one street)


The first thing to point out is the street doesn’t look like much and neither do the stores. They are like many “back streets” in Adana. To the unsuspecting eye you would walk right by it.


I have traced out route to the street for you in the google map picture and take note, if you walk that way you will find many great little shops (we also spent money in) in the proceeding streets.


Firstly Shop number 1 on my map: LUGGAGE REPAIRER.

This is a little shop where they repair luggage. (just next to it is a great shop for bed linen and material but I haven’t blogged specifically about that shop) My zippers were busted on my luggage (3 in all) and I needed them fixed before we left Adana so we took my bag here. It was fixed in 5 minutes for less than 5 lira!! Nice man too. Good to know because luggage gets knocked around a lot travelling!

Shop number 2 on my map: KEBAB SHOP – Fuat Usta

I have already mentioned this little Kebab shop in previous blogs but wanted to mention you can get a great Adana kebab wrap for $4! Great when you having a busy on the run shopping day.

Shop number 3 on my map: OZKAN TAKI BIJUTERI BONCUL DUNYASI (Beads Beads Beads!!)

A great bead shop at just about wholesale prices. Certainly you won’t get prices like that back home in Australia and there’s so much more variety! (I spent alot of time sitting outside this shop waiting for my wife! lol)

Shop number 4 on my map: GUNAL TICARET & PAZARLAMA Wholesales for all types

 Kitchen trays, cups, etc… and ordainments and lots of “nit-knacks” Come to this store and you’ll pay half what you pay in the formal street gift stores on the main streets. We brought some great silver decorated cups.
Shop number 5 on my map: Wholesale Men’s Clothing
(Sorry don't have it's name so look for store in the pictre)

Here mostly business shirts, trousers, ties etc. The quality is fantastic. I brought many trousers, shirts and ties here because the quality is so much better than the thread bare uniforms that always fall apart that they provide me in my work back in Australia.

At one quarter the price of what I pay for uniforms in Australia, here you’ll get at 3 times the quality.

It’s just a rectangle shell shaped store, the clothing is nicely displayed. I recommend you try the cloths for fit. Only there’s no change room here because they are wholesalers. But they will hold up a large piece of cardboard for you whilst you try on things! Lol I recommend you wear some good undies or better still, boxer shorts for the visit! Lol




Correction: Cassurra Business Gomlek:

The shop I listed as “number 5” is actually on the next street down parallel to this one (35002. Sokak (2. Sk.)Hanedan Mh ) and the Men’s wear Shop’s name is Cassurra Business Gomlek.




 I know this because I went back there today to purchase more products. I recommend them for their fine quality garments. If you’re walking this way walk around the circle an d you’ll find a host of wholesale or very inexpensive great stores.
 Ozgelinkaya Cakes, deserts, pastry’s, sweets,



And lastly one our way back from this street we visited a desert and pastry shop called Ozgelinkaya. It is on the main road intersection where all the mini buses stop.


We brought many cakes here a number of times and also many sweet pastry’s on the walk by. Price is very good at this shop and quality also great. YUMMY!!


When I mentioned I was from Australia at this shop I was overheard on the street and many people called out “gday mate!” and “Aussie Aussie Aussie, Oy Oy Oy!” which is an sporting chant back home. It was nice.

 That’s all for today folks.

 Cheers

 Andrew