Simit

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Simit is a circular bread, typically encrusted with sesame seeds or, less commonly, poppy, flax or sunflower seeds, found across the cuisines of the former Ottoman Empire and the Middle East, especially in Armenia, Turkey and the Balkans.[1] Simit's size, crunch, chewiness, and other characteristics vary slightly by region.

In İzmir, simit is known as gevrek ("crisp"), although it is very similar to the Istanbul variety. Simit in Ankara are smaller and crisper than those of other cities.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Name

File:SimitSellerStatueÇorlu.jpg
Statue of simit seller in Çorlu, Tekirdağ, Turkey
File:Çay ve simit.jpg
Turkish tea (çay) and simit in Turkey

The word simit comes from Arabic samīd (Script error: No such module "Lang".) "white bread" or "fine flour".[2][3]

Other names are based on the Byzantine Greek kollikion (κολλίκιον), or Ancient Greek kollyra (κολλύρα), or Greek koulouri (κουλούρι). In Latin it is known as arculata. Aramaic: ܩܶܠܽܘܪܳܐ/ܩܸܠܘܿܪܵܐ (qeluro/qelora); Turkish: gevrek;[4][5] South Slavic đevrek, ђеврек, gjevrek, ѓеврек, геврек. The Armenian name is բոկեղ (bokegh). In Judaeo-Spanish it is known as roskas turkas.[6] In English it is known as rosca or coulouri.[7]

Origins

Archival sources show that simit has been produced in Istanbul since 1525.[8] Based on Üsküdar court records (Şer’iyye Sicili) dated 1593,[9] the weight and price of simit was standardized for the first time. The 17th-century traveler Evliya Çelebi wrote that there were 70 simit bakeries in Istanbul during the 1630s.[10] Jean Brindesi's early 19th-century oil paintings about Istanbul daily life show simit sellers on the streets.[11] Warwick Goble, too, made an illustration of these simit sellers of Istanbul in 1906.[12] Simit and its variants became popular across the Ottoman Empire.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Consumption

File:60 Parada de simitçi (rosquilles) vora el pont de Gàlata (Istanbul).jpg
A stand of a simit seller in Istanbul
File:Trachten Marchand de Craquelins a Vienne en Autriche.jpg
A street vendor of simit (rosquilla) in Vienna

Simit is generally served plain, or for breakfast with tea, fruit preserves, or cheese or ayran. Drinking tea with simit is traditional. Simit ("Bokegh" in Armenian) is a traditional Christmas bread in Armenia.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Simit are generally sold by street vendors in Turkey,[13] who either have a simit trolley or carry the simit in a tray on their head. Street merchants generally advertise simit as fresh ("Taze simit!"/"Taze gevrek!") since they are baked throughout the day; otherwise hot ("Sıcak, sıcak!") and extremely hot ("El yakıyor!" means "It burns the hand!") when they are not long out of the oven.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Simit is an important symbol for lower and middle-class people of Turkey. Sometimes it is called susam kebabı ("sesame kebab").Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

In other parts of the Middle East, in Egypt it is consumed with boiled eggs and/or duggah, which is a mixture of herbs used as condiments. It is commonly used to break the fast, with yoghurt or buttermilk, in mosques in Mecca and Medina.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Today, many municipalities in Turkey produce simit through their own subsidiaries.[14]

Similar products

Certain varieties of Romanian covrigi are similar to simit, the places that sell them even being known as "Simigerii".

Another type of bread similar to simit is known as obwarzanek (in particular obwarzanek krakowski) in Poland and bublik in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. The main difference is that the rings of dough are poached briefly in boiling water prior to baking (similarly to bagels), instead of being dipped in water and molasses syrup, as is the case with simit.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Girde (Uygur: Гирде), is a type of bread baked on the walls of tandoori oven, that is very similar to simit, and that the Uyghurs in China see as a characteristic item in their culture-specific kitchen.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

See also

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References

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  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  4. In parts of Turkey, referring to all crisp breads; see Modern Turkish Dictionary, TDK
  5. Evliya Çelebi's travels, Seyahatname, 1680.
  6. Matilda Koén-Sarano Diksionario Ladino-Ebreo,Ebreo-Ladino,S.Zack,Jerusalem 2010
  7. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  8. Sahillioğlu, Halil. "Osmanlılarda Narh Müessesesi ve 1525 Yılı Sonunda İstanbul’da Fiyatlar" Belgelerle Türk Tarihi 2 (The Narh Institution in the Ottoman Empire and the Prices in Istanbul in Late 1525. Documents in Turkish History 2) (Kasım 1967): 56
  9. Ünsal, Artun. Susamlı Halkanın Tılsımı.[The Secret of the Ring with Sesames] İstanbul: YKY, 2010: 45
  10. Evliya Çelebi Seyahatnâmesi Kitap I. [The Seyahatname Book I] (Robert Dankoff, Seyit Ali Kahraman, Yücel Dağlı). İstanbul: YKY, 2006: 231
  11. Jean Brindesi, Illustrations de Elbicei atika. Musée des anciens costumes turcs d'Istanbul , Paris: Lemercier, [1855]
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