Flour-dusted hands stretching thin yufka dough on a wooden board
Two students laughing while holding up misshapen gözleme on a sac griddle
Close-up of pomegranate molasses drizzling over a walnut-stuffed red pepper
Steam rising from a copper cezve of Turkish coffee on a wood fire
Hands rolling börek dough paper-thin on a floured surface
Copper pot of lentil soup catching afternoon light in a village kitchen
A warm simit on a wooden board dusted with sesame seeds
Rows of colourful spices at an Istanbul market stall
A student selecting fresh eggplants at a Turkish produce market
Flatbread blistering on a hot sac griddle over open flame
Communal table crowded with Turkish mezze dishes and tea glasses
Kunefe in a copper pan hitting hot syrup with a sizzle
Hands folding mantı dumplings into small ear shapes on a floured tray
Charcoal kebabs smoking over an Adana-style mangal grill

Istanbul · Est. 2019

Cook Like a
Turkish Grandmother

Börek, mantı, pide, and more — made by hand, in a real kitchen, with people who care about the same flavours you do.

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08:00 — The Market Walk

It starts at
the produce stall.

Before a single flame is lit, we walk the Beşiktaş market together. You learn to choose eggplants by their weight, to smell the difference between fresh and dried Aleppo pepper, to press a tomato and know exactly which dish it's meant for.

This is the part most cooking classes skip. We don't. Because a grandmother doesn't start at the stove — she starts at the market, and everything that follows is already decided.

🌶️

Urfa Biber

Smoky, oily, and deeply dark — not the heat of cayenne but the warmth of a dying ember.

🍆

Fresh Eggplant

Kavurma, imam bayıldı, or charred whole over flame. Every dish starts here.

🧈

Clarified Butter

Tereyağı, clarified to a deep amber — the fat that carries every flavour in the pot.

🫙

Pomegranate Molasses

Thick, dark, and sour-sweet. Drizzled last, always.

Reserve Your Seat at the Table →
Wide shot of a colourful Istanbul produce market with stacks of fresh vegetables
Hands selecting ripe eggplants at a Turkish market stall

Today's Haul

Beşiktaş Market, 8am

10:30 — Prep & Fire

Flour on every surface.
Fire in every pan.

No recipe cards, no pre-measured bowls. You feel the dough until it tells you it's ready. You watch the butter until it turns the colour of autumn leaves. This is how it was always taught.

Cross-section of layered su böreği showing golden pastry and cheese filling
Pastry

Su Böreği

Twelve paper-thin layers of yufka, each brushed with clarified butter. You'll make every layer yourself.

2.5 hrs of your hands in the dough

Small mantı dumplings on a floured wooden board before cooking
Dough

Mantı

Thumb-nail-sized dumplings folded one by one, dressed in garlicky yogurt and Aleppo butter.

Lahmacun flatbread blistering on a hot stone oven floor
Fire

Lahmacun

Minced lamb spread razor-thin over a disc of fermented dough, blistered in a wood-fired oven.

Künefe in a copper pan with syrup being poured over golden shredded pastry
Dessert

Künefe

Shredded kadayıf cradling fresh cheese, fried until amber, hit with orange-blossom syrup at the table.

Every class includes

🫓

4–6 dishes cooked

by your own hands

📖

Handwritten recipe booklet

to take home

🧑‍🍳

Small groups only

max 8 students

🫖

Tea, coffee & mezze

throughout the day

17:30 — The Table

Then everyone sits down
and eats together.

The dishes crowd every inch of the table. Tea glasses clink. Strangers become friends over food they made with their own hands. This part — the sitting, the eating, the talking — this is the class.

Long wooden table crowded with Turkish mezze dishes, tea glasses clinking, hands reaching for food

Every session ends with

A shared meal at the long table

2,400+

students since 2019

4.97

average rating

38

nationalities taught

94%

book a second class

I finally made my grandmother's mantı — the exact recipe she took to her grave. I cried at the table. This class gave me something I thought was lost.

Young Turkish woman smiling at a kitchen table with dough on her hands

Elif Yıldız

Bride-to-be, Ankara

Made: Mantı with yogurt & Aleppo butter

We came chasing the flavours of our Istanbul trip three years ago. Sofra didn't just recreate them — it explained why they taste that way. We cook Turkish food every Sunday now.

Mixed-race couple laughing together in a rustic kitchen setting

James & Priya Hartley

Expat couple, London

Made: Su böreği & lentil soup

I own a pide stone. I've read every book. I still couldn't get the ferment right. One afternoon here and I understood what was wrong — the water temperature, not the yeast.

American man in his 40s holding a freshly baked pide loaf

Marcus Webb

Food writer, New York

Made: Pide & lahmacun

Book Your Place

Reserve Your Seat
at the Table

Sessions run every Saturday and Sunday morning through the season. Groups of eight, never more. Choose your date below.

1 — Choose Your Date

March 2026
Su
Mo
Tu
We
Th
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Sa
Available Selected Sold out

2 — Number of Guests

Each seat is $145 USD · Includes all ingredients, recipe booklet & shared meal

3 — Dietary Needs or Allergies

4 — Your Details

Please select a date above to continue.

🫓

Next sessions: March & April 2026

8 seats per class · $145 per person