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Slow Food Turkey: Wheat Rites

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  • Slow Food Turkey: Wheat Rites

    SLOW FOOD TURKEY: WHEAT RITES

    Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso
    July 26 2012
    Italy

    Francesco Martino

    A few kilometres off the coast of Istanbul, in the Sea of Marmara,
    the Princes' Islands are the tourist destination for those who want
    to leave behind, at least for a few hours, the frenzy of the immense
    metropolis on the Bosporus. These islands have been for millennia
    a laboratory of cultural contamination, as testified by recipes,
    smells, tastes, and words - suspended between memory and oblivion

    Kinaliada, Burgazada, Heybeliada, and finally Buyukada, the largest
    of Princes' Islands - the foaming wake of the ferry departed from
    Kabata癬_, on the European shore of the Bosporus, slips them one by
    one, like beads on a long necklace surrounded by the sparkling blue
    of the Marmara Sea. Here the ship, rocked by the wind, docks at the
    unadorned pier and hundreds of tourists descend along the battered,
    yet still elegant "Iskele", the maritime station, decorated with
    turquoise tiles.

    The Princes' Islands, or simply "the islands" (Adalar), are a small
    archipelago located an hour of boat from Istanbul, across its Asian
    shore. Their long history is intimately linked to that of the city
    of Constantine, who later became the capital of the sultans. Over
    time, as in the rest of the Ottoman Empire, the islands have become a
    melting pot of different ethnicities, cultures, and religions: Greek,
    Turkish, Armenian, Alevi, Jewish. Over the centuries, that meeting
    stemmed a unique synthesis, as varied as the colourful bazaars (Carsi)
    that still stun and fascinate millions of visitors. A mix of beliefs
    and traditions, but also languages, flavours, and fragrances.

    With the collapse of the Sublime Porte, that multicoloured world,
    made of contamination and eclecticism, largely disappeared, except
    for a few small pockets. The most vital one, that miraculously
    survived up to the present day, is precisely that of the Princes'
    Islands, where sounds and flavours of a fragile and precious past
    now face a new challenge, that of globalised modernity. In recent
    decades Istanbul has literally exploded, rising from two million
    inhabitants in 1970 to over 13 million in 2010. A real earthquake,
    capable of shaking balances and erasing centuries-old heritages.

    "Starting with food. And language. The idea is simple and true. Food
    and language are the deep connections that bind people to the earth,
    to their identity. To preserve the unique heritage of the Princes'
    Islands, this is the key. Also because the language-food pairing
    is the thread that binds all the islanders, regardless of religion
    and ethnicity".

    Aylin Oney Tan, a long-time architect specialising in historic
    monuments, is now one of the best-known experts in culinary culture
    of Turkey and lives in Ankara, where she chairs the local Convivium,
    and the Princes' Islands. She is the soul of a community of educators
    and promoters of multicultural food traditions of the Islands, created
    to protect flavours and words that are likely to disappear forever.

    "When the municipality built a museum on Buyukada, we took the plunge
    and worked to create a section on food and language. We reconstructed
    the cycle of religious holidays - Muslim, Orthodox, Catholic, Jewish,
    and Alevi - and the dishes that characterise them. What has emerged
    is an extraordinary picture of ties and syncretism".

    The most striking example involves the most simple and basic element
    you can find on your plate: wheat. Dishes based on wheat mark rites
    of passage and seasonal rites in all cultures of the islands. The
    dis bugday覺, sweet corn boiled and sweetened with sugar or honey or
    grape molasses, sprinkled with cinnamon and chopped nuts, is used in
    the Turkish-Muslim tradition to celebrate a child's first tooth.

    A very similar pie, koliva, is prepared by the Greeks to mark
    another, sadder passage - it is cooked for Ton Psihon, the Day of the
    Dead. The Armenian community has its own sweet corn, the 'anus abur,
    decorated with pomegranate seeds and scented with essence of roses,
    that accompanies any celebration of Christmas or the New Year. The
    Jewish Sephardic version, called t Koco line, is served for the feast
    of the trees of Tu Bishvat along with dried fruits, nuts, dried figs,
    dates, and olives.

    The very Sephardic community, arrived to Istanbul with the expulsion
    of Jews from Spain in 1492, gave birth to some of the most amazing
    and delicious fusions. "My people brought with them only two things,
    the language of the fathers and the recipes of the mothers, that
    mingled here with local ones", says Selin Rozanes, Slow Food member
    and founder of the Turkish Flavours. From the recipes that Selin
    shows me, peep unique creations like dulse de kayesi (sweet kay覺s覺
    - Turkish for "apricot") or burekos de igo, a delicacy made of figs
    stuffed with walnut, where the Turkish word borek (used to indicate
    savoury fillings) meets with the Hebrew-Spanish igo (fig).

    Even the plots between Armenian and Turkish traditions run deep,
    with unexpected twists. "The most important community cookbook,
    the "A癬_c覺n覺n Kitab覺" (1914), was written in Turkish, but using
    Armenian characters", says Takuhi Tovmasyan in her office crammed
    with books.

    Takuhi is the author of a book in which family memories are interwoven
    with Armenian recipes in Istanbul and its surroundings. "Meat,
    eggplant, green peppers, onions, garlic, lentils, beans, tomatoes,
    spices. In the memories of my childhood all the ingredients and smells
    in my grandmother's kitchen speak both Armenian and Turkish. I still
    feel on my tongue the taste of food and all the words".

    On the islands, the crossing of the lines that usually divide religions
    and ethnicities was and continues to be a constant. The sweet bread
    originally prepared by the Greeks to celebrate the Passover, for
    example, has over time become a staple food for all the population,
    and under the name of paskalya f繹regi is consumed throughout the
    year without reference to the religious celebration.

    The spring festival of St. George (Ayios Yorgi, with a church dedicated
    to him on Buyukada) corresponds to the Turkish H覺drellez - both
    communities celebrate with a picnic where the main dish is roast lamb.

    "My family was mixed with Greek and Turkish blood, but also Hebrew
    and Hungarian - a true Ottoman family", recalls with a smile Sema
    Temizkan, passionate researcher of the Greek-Byzantine cultural
    heritage. "The kitchen was the kingdom of my grandmother Theopoula,
    who was capable to meet and enhance all the colourful festivities
    that marked the life of our house, for example with fanuropita,
    a cake mixed with orange juice and grape juice, consumed on August
    27th in honour of Ayos Fanurios, the patron saint of lost things".

    It only takes a few hundred metres along the steep sides of Buyukada,
    where rows of cypress trees leave little by little room for dark
    forests of pine, to find yourself alone. Cars are banned on the
    islands, where bikes or horse-drawn carriages are the only transport.

    >From here, Istanbul, with its miles of concrete buildings and
    skyscrapers, is a fascinating, but equally terrible vision. The
    immense megalopolis represents the danger facing the islands'
    microcosm. Hundreds of thousands of people every week leave the chaos
    of the city behind for a few hours on the quiet Princes' Islands - a
    peaceful invasion, but one that may succeed where the violent ones of
    the past have not, and delete words and fragrances of an unrepeatable
    history of coexistence and mutual enrichment.

    A real danger, to fight with words and flavours. The stakes are too
    high in case of defeat - not even the intercession of Ayos Fanurios,
    I fear, could help Istanbul to find the lost treasure of pearls on
    the Sea of Marmara.

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