Turkish Coffee

Turkish Coffee is more of a process than a product.

INGREDIENTS

  • Authentic Turkish Coffee (or very finely ground coffee)

STEP BY STEP

  1. Pour in cold water in the coffee pot.
    – You should use one cup of cold water for each cup you are making and then add an extra half cup “for the pot”.
  2. Add a level teaspoonful of the ground Turkish coffee per cup in the water while the water is cold and stir.
    – The amount of coffee may be varied to taste, but do not forget, there will be a thick layer of coffee grounds left at the bottom of your cup for properly made Turkish coffee.
  3. Heat the pot as slowly as you can. The slower the heat the better it is. Ideally allow 15 to 20 minutes to come to a near boil.
    – Make sure you watch it to prevent overflowing when the coffee boils.
  4. When the water boils pour some (not all) of the coffee equally between the cups, filling each cup about a quarter to a third of the way.
    – This will make sure that everybody gets a fair share of the foam forming on top of the pot, without which coffee loses much of its taste.
  5. Now is the time to add sugar into each cup if you wish.
  6. Continue heating until coffee boils again (which will be very short now that it has already boiled). Then distribute the rest of the coffee between the cups.
  7. Since there is no filtering of coffee at any time during this process, you should wait for a few minutes before drinking your delicious Turkish coffee while the coffee grounds settle at the bottom of the cup.

MORE INFO

Centuries ago, when people devoted more time to attend to the demands of their earthly pleasures and less time to the demands of business and corporate life, coffee making developed some rituals that exist in ‘lite’ versions in our days. In old times, connoisseurs expected their coffee to be heated slowly over charcoal embers for 15 to 20 minutes, the copper coffee pot being frequently taken away from the fire to prevent overheating.

A connoisseur can easily tell the difference between a properly made Turkish coffee and one prepared the way cheap restaurants would do, basically boiling the coffee quickly, degrading thus the taste and producing little if any froth that needs to cover the cup of coffee.

Although to this day there are still a few people who either do or at least know the days when coffee was heated on charcoal, for all practical purposes modern electric or gas stove tops became the heating equipment of choice. To make proper Turkish coffee you need Turkish coffee beans, a Turkish coffee pot (“cezve”), and Turkish coffee cups (“fincan”), and optionally, if you want to grind the beans, a Turkish coffee grinder (“kahve degirmeni”). Note that Turkish coffee requires extra fine ground coffee which some electrical grinders fail to produce.

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