Çiğ Köfte

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Çiğ Köfte, in English Raw Meatballs, has been in Turkish cuisine for more than three thousand years. It is one of the ancient food varieties of the Mesopotamian region. Its history traces back to King Nimrud who is a biblical figure known as the mighty one on the earth and the great-grandson of Noah.

This ancient food is made with bulgur, ground meat, tomato paste, pepper paste, pomegranate syrup, and lots of spices. It is made by mixing the all ingredients and that is it. You don’t need to cook or do any further process to make Çiğ Köfte. This may sound like a very easy thing to do; however, it is not because you need to knead the ingredients for about one hour constantly with your palm to let the ingredients combine well with each other. This is the original Çiğ Köfte preparation method. Today, Cig Kofte (Turkish Raw Meatballs) is made with bulgur only because raw meat spoils very fast and it is not healthy to consume raw meat.

Most of the restaurants in Turkey consider Çiğ Köfte as meze. When you go to a Kebab restaurant, usually the waiter brings it right away before you give any single order. It is an on-the-house starter for most Turkish Kebab restaurants. Also, you don’t need to go to a special restaurant to eat Cig Kofte in Turkey. You can find small food shops on the streets that sell it either on a plate or wrapped.

Cig Kofte on plate and wrapped

In Turkey, there is an unfinished debate going on for years regarding where the first Çiğ Köfte has been first made. One side says it is first made in Adıyaman city and the other side says Urfa city. For me, both cities have amazing local dishes, and thank you to whoever made this delicious food.

The Story of Çiğ Köfte

According to the rumors between the residents of Urfa and Adıyaman city; during the King Nimrod period, people were worshipping various Gods. Abraham tries to enlighten King Nimrod that this is wrong and there is only one God exists. King Nimrod thought that Abraham will be a threat to his kingdom by trying to illuminate people. He ordered to capture Abraham and burn him in a big fire in front of the villagers. For this, he ordered to collect of all the woods in the village. There has been no wood left in the village even for cooking.

While all these were happening; a hunter villager, who hasn’t know King Nimrod’s order, turns back to his home from hunting with a deer and tells his wife to cook something for dinner. His wife informs that the King collected the all wood in the village and nothing has left to light a fire. He tells his wife to do something with the meat otherwise it will get rotten. She takes some ingredients and cuts a piece of meat from the back of the deer leg. Then, she put them onto a stone and kneads them all night until the meat and ingredients combine well. This is how this magnificent taste has been born.

Cig Kofte
5 from 12 votes
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Çiğ Köfte

Course Side Dish
Cuisine Turkish
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 40 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Servings 6
Calories 226 kcal

Ingredients

  • 200 gr minced meat (OPTIONAL)
  • 2 1/2 cups extra fine brown bulgur
  • 1 cup boiled water
  • 1 bunch fresh flat parsley leaves finely chopped
  • 1 medium size onion finely chopped
  • 3 spring onions finely chopped
  • 4 tbsp red pepper flakes finely crushed
  • 2 tbsp tomato paste
  • 2 tbsp pepper paste
  • 2 teaspoon salt
  • 2 tbsp pomegranate molasses
  • 2 tbsp vegetable oil
  • 1/2 juice of half fresh lemon

Instructions

  1. Place the extra fine bulgur in a cup and pour the boiling water on it and close the top of the cup with kitchen towel and wait 5 minutes. (This will help the bulgur to get soften and you won’t need to knead long time).

  2. Rinse the bulgur and place it together with the finely chopped onions, red pepper flakes and in a large round baking tray with 5-6 cm high sides. (Do not add spring onions and parsley leaves yet. We will add them later.)

  3. Knead the mixture for 10 minutes with the base of your palm. 

  4. Add the minced meat (OPTIONAL), pepper paste, tomato paste, pomegranate molasses, lemon juice, salt and continue to knead 20 minutes until the bulgur fully soften. 

  5. Add the finly chopped spring onions, pasley leaves and 2 tbsp vegetable oil and knead 10 minutes. (Adding few ice cubes helps the Çiğ Köfte mixture not to get dry. It helps it to stay moisturized during kneading).

  6. The mixture is ready when it becomes a smooth paste form. Then, grab a walnut-sized lump of the mixture and squeeze softly in your palm to give the special Çiğ Köfte form.

  7. Line up them on serving plate and serve with lettuce leaves aside. You can use lettuce leaves as a wrapper.

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This Post Has 18 Comments

  1. Rania

    5 stars
    My first attempt and I really loved this , couldn’t see how to upload a photo

    1. Turkish Foodie

      Hi Rania; I hope you like and enjoyed the recipe. 👌😉

  2. Andrey

    5 stars
    It is really a shame that you don’t see any raw meat in these things anymore. The name itself stands for Raw Cutlets and if raw meat is removed from the dish – it loses all purpose, while still trying to look like raw beef, with all the tomatoe/pepper pastes and red spices, almost seems like a scam haha.

    I lived in Istanbul for 4 years and didn’t realize that this is the traditional recipe, now it all makes sense!

    Defenitely will be trying the raw meat version at home!

    People eat sushi or sashimi, carpaccio or tartare all the time, there’s absolutely nothing dangerous about it, I have been eating raw beef for years and I feel very strong.

    1. Turkish Foodie

      Andrey; you should definitely give a try the raw meat version of this recipe.
      I believe you’ll like it a lot.👌👌

  3. Carrie Feinstein

    5 stars
    What is pepper paste?

    1. ilke Barış

      Dear Carrie; think about tomato paste. Instead of tomato; it is made with pepper. Kindly; look at the “related products” section above the recipe card. I updated after your comment and added two Turkish Pepper Paste producers’ products that you can find on amazon. In fact; I use these brands too. I hope, my answer helps your question. 😊😊

  4. Michael Saunders

    5 stars
    In historically traditional Çiğ Köfte recipes, what type of meat was used? Lamb/mutton? Or beef?

    1. ilke Barış

      Always beef Michael. I hope it helps. 🙂

    2. Oliver Knightley

      5 stars
      None, çig köfte directly translates to vegetarian meatballs, I have never seen anyone in turkey add meat to this, I have no idea why they would put meat here either. This is coming from a turkish person who has made çig köfte since they were ten.

      1. Turkish Foodie

        Oliver; if you have read the post from top to bottom, you were able to see that I mention both versions (with and without meat) of Çiğ Köfte. it is called Çiğ Köfte (Raw Meatballs) because it is made with raw minced meat. It is okay not knowing the meat included version of Çiğ Köfte. It is most likely because you and your friend haven’t been to Adıyaman city of Turkey. It is the city where the Çiğ Köfte was born from. I am so glad that you and your Turkish friend who makes Çiğ Köfte since he was ten learned something new from this post. Cheers 😊👍 Ps: we don’t have such a thing called “vegetable balls” in our cuisine.

      2. Rania

        5 stars
        The versions I had in Turkey definately had raw meat and I make them the same way. My understanding is the vegetarian version is far more recent

      3. Turkish Foodie

        Hi Rania. Actually; it is all upto your taste. I like the both version of Çiğ Köfte. And I suggest you try the both version too. 😉👍

    3. Lucia

      5 stars
      Where can I find the pomegranate molasses?

  5. Diana

    5 stars
    Hi Ike, once made (meatless) how long I can keep it in the fridge before it spoils?

    1. ilke Barış

      Hi Diana,
      We always like to eat it while it freshly made. Just don’t keep it in the fridge for more than 2 days. Otherwise, it loosens its taste. My personal preference to consume it fresh. The day you make.

  6. Annie Zeybekoglu

    5 stars
    For many Turkish recipes, a “cup” refers to a Turkish tea glass. Is that the case for this recipe??

    1. ilke Barış

      Annie; I am using US cup sizes at my recipes. So, you can consider 1 cup = 250 ml.
      Cheers.

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