Taste of the rose

Taste of the rose

Aylin Öney Tan
The rose is more than a rose in this part of the world. The name of the rose, simply “gül” in Turkish, was once used to refer to all flowers, perhaps because it was the ultimate flower, perfect in shape, color, smell and moreover, in taste. Culinary use of the rose dates back to ancient times, but it is the Ottoman, Iranian and Indian cookery that make the most of the taste of the rose.
 
Rose-water or rose petals are used primarily in sweets and drinks, like the gulab-jamun of India, or rose-flavored sherbets and ices of Persian and Ottoman palace cuisines. Milk puddings, aşure and zerde always have a good splash of rose-water in Turkish cuisine, and the ultimate rose dessert is güllaç, as the name implies, it means “rosy dish”. In olden times, it was also used in savory dishes like meat stews, but this remains a thing of the past now, especially in Turkey. In Iran some salty dishes still have a touch of rose, one delightful example being Iraninan cacık, the refreshing cucumber-yoghurt cold soup. 
 
Apart from being a culinary delight, rose is also a remedy. Ottoman medicine praised rose for its curative properties. Ottoman medicine was based on a unique blend of the teachings of Hippocrates, father of western medicine and Avicenna (or Ibn Sina), his eastern equivalent for the Islamic world, who studied the Indian Ayurvedic system, Islamic practice and the ancient Greek medicine. According to Ottoman belief, rose is cool and refreshing; it smells sweet and lifts the spirits up. Rose is a strong anti-depressant, that’s why rose-water is sprinkled on guests paying their condolences in the funeral house. Rose gives you a sense of light-hearted wellbeing, and that may be the sole reason why we all have a lofty mood when we hear “La Vie en Rose” playing. We may want to forget all our sorrows and heart-broken memories, but rose is also about remembrance. Rose oil is extremely good for memory – that used to be the best kept secret of Muslim imams. Dropping a few drops of rose-oil in between the sheets of Quran: rose aroma helps reciting the whole holy book from memory.
 
Rose may be symbolic for the Muslim faith, but it is also about the art of drinking. Persian poet Omar Khayyam wrote so profoundly of rose and grape and wine, and strangely rose was the secret ingredient of western drinks, like punches and juleps. The initial punch was actually “penç,” meaning five in Persian, and consisted of five ingredients, rose-water, grape juice (or wine), lemon juice, sugar and ice. It was taken on by crusaders and later travelled all the way to the Americas by the Portuguese sailors, just like julep, having its name from rose-water güllab (or gulab, culab). Eventually the taste of the rose faded away, but its name prevailed. 
 
Things are what they are. In the case of a rose it is only a flower, but it is also about taste and smell; about forgetting and remembering.

As Gertrude Stein has written: Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose...  but a very tasty rose!
 
Recipe of the Week: There is nothing more cheerful than a bright pink ice-cold drink served at the end of the day just before sunset. This cool rose-mint bowl is inspired by the good old “penç,” similarly making use of only five ingredients: 2 bottles of Rosé Wine, 200 ml. Vodka, (vanilla or raspberry flavored if you wish), 1 small bottle rose drink (gül şerbeti), 1 cup fragrant rose petals rubbed with 2 tablespoons sugar (or 2 tablespoons good quality rose jam), a good handful of fresh mint leaves. Mix sugar rubbed rose petals with vodka. If not using rose, stir in the rose jam. Chill the wine and the sherbet. If you cannot find the sherbet, a bottle of soda-pop will do as well. Mix everything in a well-chilled bowl or glass pitcher. Strain the vodka beforehand. Add the mint leaves. Decorate each glass with rose petals and mint leaves. Voila: Sunset in your glass...Enjoy!
 

Bite of the week


Fork of the Week: Rose jam, I believe, can only be perfected at home; however if you crave some and can’t get ahold of any Damascene roses, the best ones to be found in the market are those two: Have a jar or jug of “gül reçeli” at Cafer Erol, my favorite candy and Turkish delight shop. Their branch in Kadıköy, just on the corner of the pedestrian road leading to the fish mongers, never runs out of them. Another favorite is by Nar Gourmet, even if you cannot make it to the Armaggan stores in Nuruosmaniye or Nişantaşı, you can find it many upscale delicatessen shops and supermarkets, or even better order online. Their rose jam is heavenly, made from the original recipe of food researcher Gökçen Adar, a true expert on rose flavored sweets.
 
Cork of the Week: It is delightful to sip a glass of chilled rosé wine. There has been a boom in the market of the rosy wines, once, we had only Lâl, but nowadays every winery has quite a range with every shade of pink, from a shy blush to shocking fuchsia pinks. Here are a few lesser known new pinkies to recommend: La Vie En Rose 2013 by Uluca Vineyards (from Cabernet Sauvignon); Sava Blush by Pamukkale (from Kalecik Karası & Çalkarası); Rose 2012 by Chateau Nuzun (from Syrah, Zinfandel, Öküzgözü); Pembe by Chamlija (from Cabernet Sauvignon). Vinolus Rose 2011 (from Tempranillo, Kalecik Karası).