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This egg-cellent dish is Turkey's gift to the world

This egg-cellent dish is Turkey's gift to the world

The Age19-05-2025

The dish
Menemen, Turkey
Plate up
Is there any single ingredient greater, more versatile, more delicious, than a simple egg? This is one of the world's favourite foodstuffs, a source of protein you will find on menus everywhere from Mexico to Moldova, from Japan to Jamaica. There are so many famous egg dishes out there, and that list must surely include Turkey's gift to the shell-cracking world, menemen.
This is a one-pan wonder that would make any morning on a Mediterranean shore just that bit more beautiful: diced tomatoes, green capsicum and sometimes onions are sauteed in a shallow pan, before the occasional addition of sucuk sausage and then, finally, beaten eggs, which are scrambled with all the other ingredients, topped with crumbled cheese and minced herbs, and served (in the pan) with a hunk of crusty bread. Pair this wonder with a hearty Turkish coffee and a view of sparkling waters, and your day is off to a flyer.
First serve
Single-pan egg dishes are not exactly uncommon in the lands around the Mediterranean: consider shakshuka from the Maghreb region, or huevos revueltos (scrambled eggs) in Spain. The unique origins of menemen, however, are easy to discern, given it is named after the town in which it was supposedly conceived: Menemen, in the coastal Izmir region of Turkey. The dish is thought to have emerged during the Ottoman Empire, though an exact timeline is difficult to discern. Regardless, the creation was a simple blending of ingredients that came easily to hand on the fertile Aegean plains: vegetables, eggs and bread were staples begging to be combined.

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