
Turkish Food: What to Eat and What It Costs
Turkish food is genuinely one of the world's great cuisines — and still cheap by international standards despite the lira's swings: street food runs $1–3, a casual restaurant meal $5–12, a nice dinner out $15–30 per person. Don't miss İskender kebab, a full meze spread, Turkish breakfast (kahvaltı), manti, and baklava. Tea (çay) is closer to a social ritual than a beverage — expect it offered constantly, including in shops you're just browsing.
Turkish cuisine is deep and regional — this is not a one-dish country. Here's what to actually order, roughly what it costs, and the tea-and-coffee etiquette that's a genuine part of daily life, not a performance for tourists.
Must-try dishes
| Dish | What it is | Approx. price |
|---|---|---|
| İskender kebab | Sliced döner over pide bread, tomato sauce, melted butter, and yogurt | $6–12 |
| Meze spread | A shared table of small dishes — hummus, ezme, dolma, cacık, and more | $8–20 for a table |
| Kahvaltı (Turkish breakfast) | A spread of cheeses, olives, eggs, tomatoes, cucumber, honey, and jam | $6–15 per person |
| Manti | Small dumplings in garlic yogurt with paprika-chili butter | $5–10 |
| Baklava | Layered filo pastry with pistachio or walnut, soaked in syrup | $1–4 per piece |
Tea and coffee culture
Çay (black tea, served in small tulip-shaped glasses) is closer to a social gesture than a menu item — it's offered constantly, including by shopkeepers while you browse, with no obligation to buy anything. Turkish coffee (kahve) is thick, unfiltered, and traditionally served with a small glass of water and a piece of Turkish delight; don't drink the grounds that settle at the bottom of the cup.
Turkish delight (lokum) and sweets
Lokum comes in dozens of flavors well beyond the classic rosewater — pistachio, pomegranate, and double-roasted varieties are all worth seeking out. Buy from an established confectioner (Istanbul's Hafız Mustafa and Koska are both long-running, reliable names) rather than the cheapest tourist-strip stall.
Dietary needs
Halal is the default across virtually all Turkish restaurants, which makes things simple for halal travelers. Vegetarians do well — meze culture leans heavily vegetable- and legume-based (hummus, ezme, dolma, various bean dishes). Vegan travelers need to check more carefully, since yogurt and butter appear in many dishes that otherwise look plant-based (İskender in particular is not vegan-friendly). Nut allergies: pistachios and walnuts are common in baklava and some savory dishes — always ask before ordering.
Where to eat
- A neighborhood lokanta (a casual, cafeteria-style restaurant serving home-style dishes) for an authentic, cheap meal away from the tourist strips.
- Istanbul's Kadıköy market (Asian side) for a less touristy street-food and produce-market experience than Sultanahmet.
- Any small çay bahçesi (tea garden) for the full slow-tea-and-people-watching experience.
What it costs, all in
| Meal type | Price per person |
|---|---|
| Street food (döner, simit) | $1–3 |
| Casual sit-down restaurant | $5–12 |
| Mid-range restaurant | $12–20 |
| Nice dinner out | $20–40 |












































