• acargitz@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Greek baklava also is typically made with butter and walnuts, whereas Turkish baklava is with pistachios and oil.

    All that said, it’s all part of the Eastern Mediterranean cultural continuum, it’s all one thing and the flag you put on it matters less and less the more you learn about it.

    • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      part of the Eastern Mediterranean cultural continuum

      this sounds like a great diplomatic way of phrasing the foods that have no specific origin during the era of the ottoman empire. I mean, some things are recent enough to be labelled turkish, or at least turkic, but others are uncertain enough to deserve this moniker.

      I’ll tell you one thing though… none of that food is german, no matter what the walking Berliners will tell you about Döner Kebap.

      • acargitz@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        I honestly think the continuum existed before the Ottomans. Take the Mediterannean and start mixing in everything from Persians, Armenians and Arabs to Romans, Slavs and Greeks. Everything is related to everything else and has a history from 3000BC and roots from Spain to Mongolia. Take a greco-roman cake, add persian confectionaries and let it marinate in the Ottoman empire, and presto a new thing.

    • pseudo
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      2 days ago

      butter and walnuts

      Keep talking to me…