Welcome
Login:   Pass:     Register - Forgot Password - Resend Activation

Turkish Class Forums / Turkish Food Recipes

Turkish Food Recipes

Add reply to this discussion
Moderators: libralady, sonunda
domates külü( for breakfast)
(28 Messages in 3 pages - View all)
1 [2] 3
10.       Elisa
0 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 12:54 pm

Quoting Lyndie:

The best place to eat them actually, is in a small turkish cafe (where only turks go), outside looking at the sea, with a bottomless tea glass. Well that's one of my favourite ways.



I can imagine that very well. But it looks like I won't encounter a place like that for a while

11.       ramayan
2633 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 02:00 pm

Quoting Elisa:

Yes, I know that's not for breakfast

I lovvvee those!!! Especially those with cheese! Can you make them? Or do you buy them ready-made? Or does your mum make them for you




im student and live away from my home and my family...so i cook them myself.....i can cook many things and did this tomato dis mornings and i wana share.....u cant find it ready-made.....i wish my mum could do dis for me....but.

anyway...at least im not hungry....

12.       Elisa
0 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 02:50 pm

Quoting ramayan:

Quoting Elisa:

Yes, I know that's not for breakfast

I lovvvee those!!! Especially those with cheese! Can you make them? Or do you buy them ready-made? Or does your mum make them for you




im student and live away from my home and my family...so i cook them myself.....i can cook many things and did this tomato dis mornings and i wana share.....u cant find it ready-made.....i wish my mum could do dis for me....but.


With ready made I was talking about the boregi.
And I didn't want to make you sad, talking bout your mum
Nice to hear you cook for yourself, a lot of girls like that

Quoting ramayan:

anyway...at least im not hungry....


I'm not hungry anymore now. Bread and cheese, always works

13.       Elisa
0 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 02:58 pm

Quoting ramayan:

in summer tomatoes are desiccated under sun light and cut up small pieces .......



I know I know, I'm slow sometimes , but did you mean "dried tomatoes"?? Only now I realize. That must be really delicious, because of that peculiar taste!

14.       ramayan
2633 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 09:35 pm

Quoting Elisa:

Quoting ramayan:

in summer tomatoes are desiccated under sun light and cut up small pieces .......



I know I know, I'm slow sometimes , but did you mean "dried tomatoes"?? Only now I realize. That must be really delicious, because of that peculiar taste!




ummm thx lyndie...yes dried tomata great ....and bread and cheese and jam..always best for students.....anyway.....have a nice night....

15.       Lyndie
968 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 10:07 pm

In England, we get 'Sun dried Tomatoes' you can buy them in jars already in olive oil so you don't have to use more to cook them. I made Ramayan's domates kulu this morning and it was wonderful. I put quite a lot of garlic in as well though, because I firmly believe in the health (and beauty) giving properties of garlic. (not that it matters how beautiful you are because if you eat enough garlic no one will come near you lolOlolO)
Aferin Ramayan - Sorry you miss your mum's cooking. I'll cook for you if you come to London!

16.       Lyndie
968 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 10:12 pm

Quoting terra:

does it have something common with "suboregi"? i had it for breakfast it was as piece of pie.Lyndie may be you know how it is cooked?



Sorry Terra I missed this post.
I can't remember what this is called. But you can make this. You just take the yufka, but buy it in flat sheets. You separate the layers and put cheese and spinach and anything you want in really. press the layers back together and fry it on both sides in olive oil. It then goes crispy and brown on the outside and all sort of gooey and squishy in the middle. Yummmm..
You can also use yufka just like bread. again fry pieces in olive oil or olive oil and butter and then serve it instead of bread also yummmmm....

17.       cyrano
0 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 10:39 pm

Lyndie,

I think you mentioned Sigara Böreği-Cigarette Börek.

Canım da çekti şimdi!.. Ehi!..

18.       Lyndie
968 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 10:45 pm

Quoting cyrano:

Lyndie,

I think you mentioned Sigara Böreği-Cigarette Börek.

Canım da çekti şimdi!.. Ehi!..



Cyrano - there are 54 meanings for 'çekmek' in the dictionary you will have to translate for me lutfen!

19.       cyrano
0 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 10:49 pm

Quoting Lyndie:

Quoting cyrano:

Lyndie,

I think you mentioned Sigara Böreği-Cigarette Börek.

Canım da çekti şimdi!.. Ehi!..



Cyrano - there are 54 meanings for 'çekmek' in the dictionary you will have to translate for me lutfen!



But there is only one meaning of the idiom "canı çekmek". Though I must admit that it is an interesting detail and wasn't expecting something like that. Anyway, at any rate, you are my english teacher.

20.       cyrano
0 posts
 08 Dec 2005 Thu 10:59 pm

Well, according to my dictionary, "canı çekmek" means "long for something."

(28 Messages in 3 pages - View all)
1 [2] 3
Add reply to this discussion




Turkish Dictionary
Turkish Chat
Open mini chat
New in Forums
Crossword Vocabulary Puzzles for Turkish L...
qdemir: You can view and solve several of the puzzles online at ...
Giriyor vs Geliyor.
lrnlang: Thank you for the ...
Local Ladies Ready to Play in Your City
nifrtity: ... - Discover Women Seeking No-Strings Attached Encounters in Your Ci...
Geçmekte vs. geçiyor?
Hoppi: ... and ... has almost the same meaning. They are both mean "i...
Intermediate (B1) to upper-intermediate (B...
qdemir: View at ...
Why yer gördüm but yeri geziyorum
HaydiDeer: Thank you very much, makes perfect sense!
Random Pictures of Turkey
Most liked