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Doner kebab

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Döner kebab sandwich served in a thick pita.

Döner kebab (as döner kebap in Turkish and often simply döner, doner, donner, or donair), which literally means "rotating roast meat" is the name given to a Turkish dish made with mutton. A version developed to suit German tastes by Turkish immigrants in Berlin has become one of the world's most popular fast food dishes.

History

In travelogues from the 18th century, döner kebab is described as a dish from Asia Minor, consisting of mutton grilled on horizontal rotating skewers. Traditionally, it was served on a plate with rice and a hot sauce with melted butter and ground paprika.

The original form of today's döner kebab is Oltu kebab. Oltu is a small town near Erzurum Turkey. The original form is grilled horizontally and the slices are cut thicker, after inserting a special L shaped Oltu shish along the surface. In the 19th century, the modern form was invented in Bursa. The original form is still served in many cities of Turkey.

Today, döner kebab is typically served as a kind of sandwich in pita (flat bread). This type of döner kebab has been available in Istanbul since about 1960. The döner kebab with salad and sauce served in pita, which is predominant in Germany and the rest of the world, was invented in Berlin-Kreuzberg in 1971, because the original preparation was not appealing enough to the German taste. Therefore, as the "modern" döner is very dissimilar to the traditional dish except by name, it can be argued that the döner as most people know it is a "traditional" German dish. The döner has been the most popular fast food dish in Germany since the 1980s.

Preparation of meat for döner kebabs

The döner meat is being sliced from a rotating spit. Note the gas grill behind the spit, which is used to cook the meat.

The meat used for making döner kebabs may be lamb, beef or chicken, but never pork. After the BSE crisis (mad cow disease), even fish was used. Generally a döner kebab sandwich is served with a salad made from shredded lettuce. Usually there is a choice between a hot sauce, a yoghurt sauce containing garlic and a yoghurt sauce containing herbs. Sometimes sheep's cheese (Turkish: beyaz peynir, or "white cheese") can be added.

There are two basic ways of preparing meat for döner kebabs:

  • The most common and authentic method is to stack seasoned slices of lean meat onto a vertical skewer in the shape of a cylinder. The stack is cooked by radiant heat from electric elements or gas fired infrared burners. Often fatty meat, tomatoes, and onions are placed at the top of the stack to drip juices over the meat keeping it moist.
  • Some cheaper shops serve a combination of seasoned sliced and ground meat cooked on a grilltop as döner kebab. In Germany the amount of ground meat is not allowed to surpass 60% (Hackfleischverordnung).

There are two ways of cutting meat from the cone:

  • by using a long and very sharp knife.
  • by using an electric knife with a rotating disc blade which produces thinner pieces of meat and thus increases the number of portions obtained from a stack.

Döner kebab around the world

Germany

In Germany, döner kebab is far more popular than hamburgers or sausages. Statistically, the Germans consume 200 to 300 metric tons of döner kebab per day. In 1998, they spent about €1.5 billion on döner kebab. Germany's large Turkish minority is probably the biggest reason for the widespread sale of döner kebab sandwiches there: After World War II, large numbers of Turks were invited to come to Germany as "guest workers" (Gastarbeiter), to help with the German reconstruction effort and fill an acute labor shortage caused by the loss of manpower in WWII. A certain share of these Turkish workers eventually stayed in Germany and opening small food shops and takeaways was an excellent option in terms of progressing from more menial jobs.

File:Tavuk doner.JPG
A Dönerci sells chicken döner (tavuk döner) in an open-air stand in downtown Ankara

Turkey

In Turkey, the "German" döner was generally frowned upon. However, in the southern coastal areas where tourism is a major economic factor, it turned out that from the early 1990s on, German and other European tourists were demanding what they considered "real" döner, that is, the Germanized variety. Nowadays, in tourist areas, the salad-sauce-sandwich type of döner is becoming more and more widespread or even dominant. The traditional way of preparation (no minced meat, marination before grilling) and serving (as a main course with sliced pita, pilaf (of bulgur or rice), and melted butter) still is the default method at restaurants. However, the prevalent type sold at fast-food junctions is the one known as döner sandviç or ekmek arası, a sandwich prepared with döner, a half loaf of a bread (not pita) and a salad (of tomatoes, onions, lettuce, and pickles) but with no sauce.

Doner Kebab served in a partitioned tray. A common style in the UK

The döner kebab (usually doner kebab; sometimes donner kebab) with salad and sauce is also a very popular dish in the United Kingdom. The typical kebab supplier (known as "kebab shops") in the UK will offer hot chilli sauce (the most common), a barbecue sauce, and garlic yoghurt-style sauce, though a mint sauce similar to raita is also common. Kebabs are often eaten as take-away food on the way home after a night out. They are very much part of the Friday and Saturday night culture rather than, say, lunchtime food. Typically, a döner kebab will be served in one of two ways in the UK: wrapped in pita bread; or served in a partitioned tray with separate areas for salad and meat, although "doner meat and chips", which includes neither pita bread nor salad, is also a popular combination. UK doner kebab often uses a different mixture of spices, due to the fact that immigrants from Cyprus operate a major proportion of the takeaways.

Australia

In Australia, kebabs are also very popular and are percived as a healthier alternative to McDonald's or KFC, due to immigration from Greece, Turkey, former Yugoslavia, and Lebanon. Kebabs are usually served in pita bread, rather than in a sandwich. Australian States with a larger Greek population than Middle Eastern refer to kebabs variously as souvlaki, gyros or yiros. Kebabs often include a fried egg in Western Australia. Meat (beef or lamb) and chicken kebabs can be easily found in Sydney where most suburbs have take-out shops that offer them. They are commonly served with cheese and a salad consisting of lettuce, tomato, onion, and tabouli on pita bread (also known locally as 'Lebanese bread'). The most commonly used sauces are tomato sauce (ketchup), barbeque (BBQ) sauce, hummus (made with chickpeas), garlic sauce and chilli or sweet chilli sauce. Doner kebabs in Sydney can be served with all the ingredients placed onto or next to the pita bread on a plate, or more commonly, with the ingredients rolled into the pita bread in the form of a 'wrap'. There are two primary ways to serve the wrapped version, it can be toasted once it's been wrapped, which has the effect of melting the cheese (if any) and baking the bread so that it hardens and becomes crisp, the alternative is just serving it without toasting. Both versions are then wrapped in paper to stop the filling from falling out and usually placed in a foil/paper sleeve.

Finland

In Finland, kebabs have gained a lot popularity since Turkish immigrants have opened restaurants and therefore bringing their traditional food. The kebab foods are generally regarded as a family evening meal, a friend party meal, fast-food and as a regular restaurant food.

Popular dishes include:

Roll kebab

("Rullakebab") usually made up from döner kebab, with salad, mayonnaise, tomatoes, cucumber and tomato sauce wrapped in pita bread to a roll.

(Pita) kebab

(Simply referred to as "kebab", or "pitakebab")

Kebab with French fries

("Kebab ranskalaisilla") döner kebab served with French fries and usually with some type of dressing.

Variations

A variation on the döner kebab known as a Donair was introduced in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada in the early 1970s. A restaurant called King of Donair claims to have been the first to serve this version in 1973. The meat in this version is sliced from a loaf cooked on a vertical spit, made from a combination of ground beef, flour or bread crumbs, and various spices, while the sauce is made from evaporated milk, sugar, vinegar, and sometimes garlic. The meat and sauce are served rolled in pita bread with diced tomato and onion. This version of the donair is very popular across Canada, with many fast food pizza restaurants also featuring donairs on the menu. Many of them also offer a donair pizza featuring all of the donair ingredients served on a pizza crust. Donair subs are also not uncommon. Halifax, in particular, seems to take a certain pride in the donair as its own defining junk food. There are long line ups to buy them at 3 A.M., after the bars close, donair sauce on its own is often provided with free with garlic bread or as a pizza topping (e.g., Barbecue chicken pizza with donair sauce) by Halifax pizza restaurants, even local franchises of chains not based in Halifax.

Japan

Döner kebabs are also starting to be seen in Japan. Often sold from vans similar to ice cream vans. They are called "Taako Sando" (Turkish Sandwich) in Japanese.

Other

In Western countries, döner kebabs are a very popular late-night dish as their stores tend to open late and cater for people who are going out.

See also