Gastronomy and Culinary Artshttp://hdl.handle.net/10679/43602024-03-29T11:14:59Z2024-03-29T11:14:59ZThe cuisine of Istanbul between east and west during the 19th centurySamancı, Özgehttp://hdl.handle.net/10679/93082024-03-22T10:44:51Z2018-01-01T00:00:00ZThe cuisine of Istanbul between east and west during the 19th century
Samancı, Özge
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2018-01-01T00:00:00ZImages, perceptions and authenticity in Ottoman–Turkish cuisineSamancı, Özgehttp://hdl.handle.net/10679/92782024-03-14T06:20:30Z2019-01-01T00:00:00ZImages, perceptions and authenticity in Ottoman–Turkish cuisine
Samancı, Özge
Since the new millennium Ottoman cuisine has become a popular subject in Turkey’ s food and drink sector and publishing milieu. Renewal of the Ottoman culinary heritage has produced a duality in imagining the past, and multiple attempts to reconstruct images of the national identity. In the process various cultural communities have come to light. To understand when and how the subject of cuisine began to be used as a leitmotif in defining Turkish national identity, and to explore the different meanings attributed to the Ottoman culinary legacy in Turkey’s nation-building project are the main objectives of this study.
2019-01-01T00:00:00ZHistory of eating and drinking in the Ottoman Empire and modern TurkeySamancı, Özgehttp://hdl.handle.net/10679/92682024-03-06T07:41:18Z2020-01-01T00:00:00ZHistory of eating and drinking in the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey
Samancı, Özge
This chapter offers a broad survey of the history of food and drinking culture in the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey covering a time period of more than 700 years. This study aims to present changes and continuities that occurred in the Ottoman culinary culture in more than 600 years. Considering the vast territories of the Ottoman Empire encompassing modern Turkey, most of Southeastern Europe including present day Balkan region, Greece, parts of Ukraine, Middle east, North Africa as far as Algeria, and large part of Arabian Peninsula, it is not easy to make a comprehensive portrait of the food culture in all of the Ottoman territories. Istanbul, the capital city of the Empire as well as the Ottoman palace that represents a model for the rest of the empire, constitutes the subject matter of the chapter. Ottoman palace culinary culture, courtly banquets versus daily food and drinking habits of the common people, food culture in religious communities, and traditional and new table manners are the thematic topics in the chapter. Eating and drinking habits in modern Turkey reflecting a direct continuation from the Ottoman past constitutes another subject.
2020-01-01T00:00:00ZInfluence of water properties on the physicochemical and sensorial parameters of water kefirTireki, Suzanhttp://hdl.handle.net/10679/92192024-02-26T07:08:15Z2024-01-01T00:00:00ZInfluence of water properties on the physicochemical and sensorial parameters of water kefir
Tireki, Suzan
Besides its natural carbonation, low sugar taste, and being vegan, water kefir is consumed due to its health benefits. Water is the major component of a beverage therefore its properties should be considered. Sensorial characteristics of water are affected by its mineral composition. Hence, in this study four different types of water were used to produce water kefir, and effects on total soluble solids (TSS) (%), pH and color during 72-hour fermentation were investigated. TSS (%) increased and pH decreased after fermentation. Carbon dioxide produced varied between 0.097 g to 0.167 g. Water kefir prepared with water having 163.00 mg/L calcium, 91.50 mg/L magnesium, 1.61 mg/L potassium, 107.70 mg/L sodium, total dissolved solids of 1181.33 ± 1.155 ppm, and pH of 5.68 ± 0.125 had the highest scores of smell, mouthfeel, taste, carbonation and preference parameters. L*, a*, and b* of the sample with the highest sensory score were 15.35 ± 0.142, −0.68 ± 0.098, and −4.84 ± 0.121, respectively.
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