Making Turkish Coffee & 4 important tips No One tells you

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Buy the best quality Turkish Coffee here Online:

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This video shows you the traditional way of preparing a rich Turkish Coffee with 4 great & important tips only Turkish people know for preparation of Turkish Coffee which I am going to share with you in this video. I bet you will also love the taste of traditional Turkish Coffee made with milk so if you do, click the below link to see how to prepare the version of Turkish Coffee with milk 👇

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Buy the best quality Turkish Coffee here Online:

Buy the high quality Turkish Copper Coffee pot here Online:

DISCLAIMER: In this video description it contains affiliate link, that means if you click on the product link, I’ll receive a small commission.
This is not a Promotional Video.

TheAncientTouch
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This is a really good explanation, eline sağlık :) Another "tip", if you are preparing for 2 or more people, usually it is hard to divide the foam equally. It is customary to offer the cup having the most foam to your eldest guest :)

dlinegrey
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You are officially my hero. I can finally understand what people mean when they say "foam up". I kept boiling mine and it was terrible. Using your method, I finally have managed to make the perfect cup of Turkish Coffee! Thank you!

Piratejeni
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I just made Turkish coffee following your directions and it was the best coffee I think I have ever had, period!

doug
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As a Turk, i must say that was a wonderfull recipe. Old people makes the same. İt could be more beautiful with rose delight

keremtoys
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Your instructions made the best tasting Turkish coffee. I tried three different methods of instructions, I prefer yours. What I learned most from you was to have patience in making the Turkish coffee. Thank you for sharing your method with us. Have a beautiful day!

apAvocado
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I had had a cup of amazing Turkish coffee 20 years ago in a coffee shop in Beijing China and had falling in love with it. The owner of the shop was moved into tears for there was few people liked it at that time and they took it off the menu when I went there the next time. After I moved away from Beijing I haven't had authentic Turkish coffee for 2 decades and I almost thought that experience was just a dream.... Thank you so much for this vid, I can FULLY sense THIS is how to make that authentic taste I have been missing! It Takes Time and Steps to brew and mix it. OMG, you just bright up my day, Thank you Thank you :D

keifyw
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I hate and love the internet. I can't believe how many haters have commented on a method of making coffee. But here I am commenting on the haters. Anyway... When I was in Kuwait and Iraq I had the good fortune of local truck or bus drivers that would share some tea or coffee they made this way. They'd bring out their propane burners whenever there was some time and before you knew it a cup would be handed to me. It was some of the best friggin' stuff I ever had. I don't really have a point. But just figured to retell a nice memory with this method of coffee making. Great video. Still going strong in 2020.

freedomslight
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I'm italian (italians are notoriously fussy about coffee), and i must say: that looks soooo good!! ☺️

gabrielladelfinadiblasio
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A friend of mine owns a guest house. One of the guests staying there is a gentleman from the United Arab Emirates, who showed us how to make Turkish coffee using Cafe Najjar (he says it's the best) and the traditional long-handled pot. I don't yet have the pot (I'm going to get one for sure!), so when I made it, I used a stainless steel cup in place of the pot. Long story short: I followed his instructions along with the tips from your excellent video (especially the one about putting the froth in the cup) and the result was absolutely the BEST coffee I have EVER tasted!! True, as you pointed out, one has to be patient while making it, but that incredible aroma as it brews is the reward for your patience... almost as delicious as drinking it! Thank you so much!

radbooley
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I love this video! Your voice is absolutely perfect for the narration.
I first tasted Turkish coffee in Beirut a very long time ago and the first time I got to meet the man who taught me everything I had to know to take over our business as my teacher was retiring and returning home to enjoy his wife and their 3 daughters. He was such a kind and honorable man, whom I miss everyday.
Not all stories have happy endings, thus is one of those. My friend and I were having our Turkish coffee when a young boy perhaps 7 or 8 years old came crashing through the door. This was about 2 am locsl time. There was blood dripping down his face from a nasty cut on his forehead, with the beginning of bruising surrounding the cut. The cafe owner's wife brought clean towels and ice in a small bowl. Then the owner brought hydrogen peroxide to clean the boy's wound. I was trained in combat medicine and in those days, physicians were at a premium in Beirut and taking the boy to a hospital was out of the question since his family was extremely poor.
As the boy was getting put back together he began to tell us what had happened to him. Evidently his sister's boyfriend didn't think the boy was being respectful enough that might and had backhanded him while wearing a ring that had passed down to him from his mother's family. It was the ring that caused the cut and the bruising. I knew straightaway that my friend was going to speak rather sharply to the boyfriend about this, but I had no idea what was really going on.
The boy was put back together and my friend was going to walk him home, less than one block from the cafe. They'd only been gone for a few moments when I heard a motorcycle engine revving uo, then a burst of machine gun fire ripped through the night. I ran to the street and found both my friend and the boy down on the ground and losing blood fast. There was no way to do anything to save them.
It took almost two months to discover what had happened. This was a case of mistaken identity. The boy's father had gotten into an argument with this boyfriend dressed him down in front of everyone. Seeing the boy with my friend the boyfriend's hired guns thought he was his father and both he and the boy were gone now.
That was my introduction to Beirut and Turkish coffee, in Lebanon. I still love Turkish coffee, but I always think of my friend, and the boy.

Thank you again for your wonderful video. I've subscribed to your channel to learn more from you. Again, many thanks!

kiasax
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I'm Brazilian and very fussy about my coffee. I usually make my coffee in a french press. Today I want to try the Turkish and looking at YouTube I came across this video and follow step by step. OMG! It came out so delicious! Thank you!

clevermara
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This was very helpful. Years ago, a Greek woman taught me how to make coffee and I knew I forgot some steps. This video was extremely helpful. Thank you

healmyroots
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I love turkish coffee. Turkish coffee is so amazing. In terms of taste, I love it both bitter and sweet. One notice: if you want sweet coffee, you must put sugar in the cold water before the water heats up and before putting coffee. This is something that I have to note. From my perspective, there are three levels of sweetness: unsweetened coffee (where the coffee is completely bitter and intense), bittersweet coffee (1 teaspoon of sugar) and sweet coffee (2 teaspoons of sugar - the coffee will taste sweet, more akin to 50% cocoa dark chocolate). You can be creative and experiment with various level of sweetness. But, I love unsweetened turkish coffee. And sometimes with one teaspoon of sugar.

urosrakic
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Thanks. I'm tunisian and i thought i already knew how to make turkish coffee. For a start, i used to stur it while on the heat..sometimes, i wait till the water gets hot before adding coffe and sugar. Here, it is a must to add droplets of ''zhar'', means orange(flowers) water.. Its perfume is divine and it is believed to have a relaxing effect.. Not what we typically want from coffee, but most of us here, take turkish coffee in the afternoons, to really degustate it.. In the morning, we havz regular coffee, with milk etc

salwaaj
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So interesting - in Bosnia we make it similar but also with key differences - it is made much much quicker. We measure one heaped teaspoon per small cup and we simply put the coffee in the dzezva (copper pot), we pour water over the coffee and then we wait for the coffee to begin boiling once it does we immediately remove. I tried your method and my coffee was full of grit.... even after waiting - maybe it’s because I used Bosnian coffee which is ground extremely fine.

lejlaletic
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thank you so much for this video! I myself am Lebanese so turkish coffee basically runs in my blood. I recently got into it after giving up filter coffee and found myself to enjoy the quiet early mornings of making turkish coffee, it became a sort of meditation for me! Being a coffee enthusiast, I've been writing down and constantly experimenting to come up with my own perfect cup, and I'm sure your tips will help me to achieve that. Thanks so much again !

tealcedar
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I'm Greek and decided to make the coffee with your instructions and it was the best I've ever made! I now will be making it like this always!!

amalialiapis
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This is the first time I’ve loved Turkish coffee so so much; it always seemed so bitter otherwise. I thank you from the bottom of my heart.

prateeksinghal
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Just returned from Turkey and am addicted to it. Thanks for the lessons.

MrMazin
welcome to shbcf.ru