Kastamonu Cuisine

Local Flavours & Gastronomy

A subtle yet deeply flavoured Black Sea–Anatolian cuisine, shaped by the pure air of the Küre Mountains, the fertile Tosya plain, and the garlic fields of Taşköprü — passed down through generations.

The Story of a Cuisine

Kastamonu cuisine fuses the humid Black Sea forests, the grain abundance of inner Anatolia, and traces of Seljuk–Ottoman palace cooking. Locals master drying, salting and fermentation to prepare for long harsh winters — tarhana, pickles, tomato paste, fruit leather, dried vegetables and kavurma fill every pantry.

Around Daday, Devrekani and Taşköprü — where livestock farming dominates — the variety of dairy (yoghurt, butter, cheese) is remarkable. Tosya produces Türkiye's finest rice; İhsangazi cultivates ancient einkorn wheat that is disappearing globally; Pınarbaşı–Azdavay bring forest mushrooms and chestnuts to the table. This richness has positioned Kastamonu as a candidate for UNESCO's Creative Cities Network in gastronomy.

Four Defining Features

Ancient Grains

Einkorn wheat, Tosya rice and kavılca — still cultivated after 10,000 years.

Organic & Local

Around Küre Mountains National Park, chemical-free production prevails.

Traditional Techniques

Iron griddle, stone oven, earth pit and copper cauldron are still in daily use.

13 GI Products

One of Türkiye's top provinces by number of registered GI food products.

Geographical Indication Products

Officially registered by the Turkish Patent Office — produced only in Kastamonu with traditional methods.

Taşköprü Garlic

Reg. 2002

Tosya Rice

Reg. 2007

İhsangazi Einkorn Bulgur

Reg. 2017

Kastamonu Pulled Halva

Reg. 2018

Kastamonu Pastırma

Reg. 2019

Daday Banduma

Reg. 2020

Devrekani Banduma

Reg. 2021

Local Dishes

Dishes that have graced Kastamonu tables for centuries, each with its own story.

Main Course

Banduma — Layered Bread with Chicken

A wedding-table classic. Thin yufka sheets are dipped in chicken broth, layered with shredded chicken, and finished with sizzling butter. Served with ayran and pickles.

Ingredients
Yufka (thin bread) Chicken Butter Chicken broth Salt
Main Course

Tirit

A Central-Asian-rooted dish where stale flatbread is softened in meat broth, topped with cubed meat, garlic yoghurt and sizzling butter. A staple at Kastamonu weddings and memorials.

Ingredients
Stale flatbread Cubed beef Yoghurt Garlic Butter
Main Course

Ekşili Pilav — Sour Rice with Lamb

A Kastamonu-specific lamb pilaf finished with a tangy sumac-infused broth poured over the rice at serving. The sour note sets it apart from other Anatolian pilafs.

Ingredients
Baldo rice Lamb Sumac Chickpeas Butter
Bread & Dough

Cırık — Cornmeal Pan Bread

A traditional cornmeal bread cooked on a flat iron griddle (sac). Eaten at breakfast with butter, honey or fresh white cheese. Common in Tosya, Daday and Azdavay villages.

Ingredients
Cornmeal Water Salt Butter
Dessert

Simit Tatlısı — Bread-Ring Dessert

A Kastamonu-style dessert made by breaking sesame simit rings into chunks and simmering them in milk, sugar and butter. Served with walnuts — a tasty way to use up day-old bread.

Ingredients
Sesame simit Milk Sugar Butter Walnuts
Dessert

Çekme Helva — Pulled Halva

A Geographical Indication product of Kastamonu. Sugar and glucose syrup are repeatedly pulled by hand into fine threads, producing a snow-white, fibrous halva that melts on the tongue. Variants include walnut, hazelnut and tahini. The city is home to century-old halva shops.

Ingredients
Sugar Glucose Lemon Walnut / Tahini (optional)
Charcuterie

Pastırma — Air-Dried Cured Beef

Kastamonu pastırma is a Geographical Indication product. Beef is air-dried in cool mountain air and coated with çemen paste (garlic, fenugreek, red pepper, water). Distinguished from Kayseri pastırma by its thinner slices and lighter çemen layer.

Ingredients
Beef Fenugreek Garlic Red pepper Salt
Main Course

Siyez Pilaf — Einkorn Wheat

Siyez (einkorn) is one of the world's oldest wheat species, cultivated for 10,000 years and still grown in İhsangazi. Its bulgur has a deeper flavour than regular bulgur, is gluten-low and low-GI. Cooked as a pilaf with butter and tomato; celebrated each September at the Siyez Festival.

Ingredients
Einkorn bulgur Butter Tomato Onion Meat broth
Main Course

Kuyu Kebabı — Pit-Roast Lamb

A whole or half lamb is slow-roasted for 4–6 hours over oak embers in a stone-lined pit, becoming fork-tender. Traditionally prepared for celebrations around Tosya and Taşköprü.

Ingredients
Lamb Salt Black pepper Oak embers
Local Product

Taşköprü Garlic Specialties

Taşköprü white garlic holds an EU Protected Geographical Indication. Known for its high allicin content and long shelf life. Used locally in garlic pickles, garlic paste, garlic butter and yoghurt-garlic mezes.

Ingredients
Taşköprü garlic
Dessert / Main

Chestnut Sweets & Dishes

Chestnuts gathered from the Küre Mountains forests become candied chestnuts (marron glacé), chestnut syrup, chestnut pilaf and chestnut-stuffed chicken. The star of Kastamonu's autumn cuisine.

Ingredients
Chestnuts Sugar Vanilla
Pasta

Kastamonu Mantı

Larger than Kayseri mantı, sometimes filled with spinach or cheese instead of mince. Served with garlic yoghurt, sizzling butter and dried mint.

Ingredients
Flour Egg Mince / Cheese / Spinach Yoghurt Butter Mint

Food Festivals

Annual celebrations where you can meet the producers behind these flavours.

Einkorn (Siyez) Festival

İhsangazi · September

Harvest of 10,000-year-old einkorn wheat, farm-to-table workshops and bread-baking contests.

Taşköprü Garlic Festival

Taşköprü · August / September

Harvest of the EU-registered white garlic; garlic dishes, music and best-producer contests.

Tosya Rice Festival

Tosya · October

Harvest celebration of Tosya rice — widely regarded as Türkiye's finest.

Küre Chestnut Festival

Küre · November

Chestnut harvest in the Küre Mountains forests — street-roasted chestnuts and chestnut desserts.

Where to Taste

  • Münire Sultan Madrasa & Historic Bazaar

    Century-old halva shops, coppersmiths and local-product cooperatives in the historic city-centre bazaar.

  • Village Guesthouses

    Eco-tourism guesthouses in Pınarbaşı, Azdavay and Daday — homemade breakfast, tarhana soup, fresh butter and griddle bread.

  • Women's Cooperatives

    Cooperatives in Bozkurt, Çatalzeytin and Devrekani — hand-cut noodles, tarhana, jams, pickles, fruit leather and einkorn bulgur.

    Discover cooperatives
  • Traditional Restaurants

    Restaurants signposted "etli ekmek evi" in the city centre serve the most authentic banduma and ekşili pilav.

"Kastamonu cuisine is a story slow-ripened by nature. Every bite carries a mountain, a forest, a plain."

Local Producers Harvest Calendar