Turkish menus celebrate cherished regional soups
In Turkey, soup is more than a dish; it is the bearer of a vast culture.
![56005712YL016_tour ISTANBUL, TURKEY - SEPTEMBER 28: Balik Lokantasi restaurant's kitchen chief serves fish soup, in Karakoy district on September 28, 2006 in Istanbul, Turkey. Balik Lokantasi means Fish Restaurant in Turkish, as its name, it is a unequally fresh fish plates comes from the see or the Bosporus every day. its owner, Mr. Ozkaraman mentions that he doesn't have a refrigerator, when the fresh fish are finished he closes up the restaurant. (Photo by Yoray Liberman/Getty Images)](/sites/default/files/styles/article_hero_medium/public/almpics/2019/02/GettyImages-72846735.jpg/GettyImages-72846735.jpg?h=a5ae579a&itok=FTDDBv9P)
Turkish breakfast today is famed for its wide range of selections, with two dozen or more small plates of everything from crumbly cheese to fried garlic sausage to a mixture of tahini and molasses all found on the same table. It is not unusual to begin late, particularly on weekends after a late night. The meal is slow-paced and communal, and often enough to keep one full until dinner.
But in the city of Gaziantep, considered by many to be Turkey's culinary capital, the most prized breakfast is a serenely spicy and hearty soup called beyran, and only the early bird gets it. Tender strips of lamb are topped with rice and then drowned in a fiery broth teeming with red pepper flakes. The best spot to get it is a restaurant called Metanet — which aptly means “strength” or “backbone” in Turkish — in the heart of Gaziantep's old city, but the morning rush begins at the crack of dawn and it tends to sell out quick.