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All Turkey Istanbul Siirt Şeref Büryan
AO Edited Gastro Obscura

Siirt Şeref Büryan

Come for the whole sides of slow-roasted lamb, stay for the regional Kurdish specialties.

Istanbul, Turkey

Added By
Anya von Bremzen
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While the büryan kebabi are the stars of the show here, but the menu is full of other gems.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
Order your kebab with bones and cracklings.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
Perde pilavi get blasted by the heat of the wood-fired oven.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
A perde pilaf consists of nut-and currant-studded rice wrapped in buttery pastry.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
The hummus here has a velvety smooth texture.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
The interior of the restaurant has gotten glammed up over the years.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
Whole sides of lamb are roasted until incredibly tender.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
The warm, house-baked pide soaks up all the juices.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
A wood-fired oven adds a tinge of smoke to dishes.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
Mumbar, or stuffed intestines, may not be much to look at, but taste delicious.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
This kebab happens to be one of the most glorious carnivorous treats in town.   Derya Turgut for Gastro Obscura
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About

Associated primarily with southeastern Turkey, and not native to Istanbul, the city’s kebab culture was nurtured by migrants from various Anatolian regions. It’s become amazingly rich in regional genres and inflections. 

There’s the luscious patlican (eggplant) kebap from the city of Sanliurfa; hand-chopped meatballs of skewered lamb from the Turkish grill mecca of Gaziantep; tepsi (tray) kebaps that involve zero skewers from the Hatay region near the Syrian border, and from Erzurum Province, cağ kebabı of lamb roasted on a rotating horizontal spit. 

The most delicious carnivorous treat in the city, however, might be büryan kebabi from the mostly Kurdish and Arabic-speaking regions of Siirt and Bitlis near Lake Van in Turkey’s far east. This scrumptious specialty involves slowly roasting whole sides of small sheep (or goat in Siirt) suspended from hooks over a wood-fired clay tandoor oven that’s usually set below ground. The result: crackling skin giving way to tender, moist meat, each order hacked into portions, weighed, and served over wood-fired pide (flatbread) that soaks up the meat juices.  

Istanbul’s büryan epicenter is the Kurdish area known as Kadinlar Pazari (“ladies bazaar”) in the shadow of the majestic 4th century Valens Aqueduct in the Fatih district. On the bustling market street here, which is “exotic” even to most Istanbullus, butcher windows showcase graphic sheep’s innards and grinning heads, open-air grocery sections are piled high with dried fruit and herb-flecked tangy cheeses, and specialty shops hawk expensive regional honeys. 

While almost every restaurant offers büryan kebabi (either from Bitlis or Siirt) meat connoisseurs flock to Siirt Şeref Büryan, a classic that has recently moved to new digs with a three-floor interior that feels simultaneously flashy and somber. The lamb büryan here is perfect, offered by weight (with or without bones) on fabulous pide warm from the oven. 

But Seref also excels in other regional specialties, whether tangy pomegranate-laced salads, or mumbar (stuffed intestines), which look a bit scary but prove addictive with their filling of aromatic spiced rice, or içli köfte (lamb-stuffed bulgur dumplings), here poached and served over yogurt. And you definitely want an order of perde (literally, “curtain”) pilaf, another Kurdish treat featuring a buttery dough case filled with nut-and currant-studded rice that cascades out of the pastry when the waiter raps the whole thing apart.  

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Come for an early lunch when the lamb is freshly roasted and order it yagli (with cracklings and fat). 

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Added By

Anya von Bremzen

Published

April 2, 2024

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Siirt Şeref Büryan
Zeyrek, Zeyrek Mahallesi, Ömer Efendi Cad, Serdab Sok. No:34
Istanbul, 34083
Turkey
41.017211, 28.95338
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