A FLAVOR CARRIED FROM AFAR : KAYSERI PASTIRMA

The Turkish horsemen of Central Asia used to preserve
meat by placing slabs of it in pockets on the sides of their saddles,
where it would be pressed by their legs as they rode. This pressed
meat was the forerunner of today’s Pastirma, a term which
literally means ‘being pressed’ in Turkish, and is the
origin of the Italian pastrami. Pastirma is a kind of cured beef,
the most famous being that made in the town of Kayseri in central
Turkey.
The 17th century Turkish writer Evliya Çelebi
praised the spiced beef Pastirma of Kayseri in his Book of Travels,
and Kayseri Pastirma is still regarded as the finest of all. Good
quality Pastirma is a delicacy with a wonderful flavour, which may
be served in slices as a cold hors d’oeuvre or cooked with
eggs, tomatoes and so on. Although Pastirma may also be made with
mutton or goat’s meat, beef is preferred.
Cattle, mainly from the eastern province of Kars,
are brought to Kayseri, where they are slaughtered and the meat
made into Pastirma at factories northwest of the city. The different
cuts of meat produce different types of Pastirma, 19 varieties from
a medium-sized animal and 26 from a large. Extra fine qualities
are those made from the fillet and contre fillet, fine qualities
are made from cuts like the shank, leg, tranche and shoulder, and
second quality from the leg, brisket, flank, neck and similar cuts.
The many tons of Pastirma produced in Kayseri is almost all sold
for domestic consumption all over Turkey.

Istanbul and Adana are the provinces with the largest
consumption. The meat undergoes a series of processes lasting about
a month. The freshly slaughtered meat rests at room temperature
for 4-8 hours before being divided into joints suitable for Pastirma
making. These are slashed and salted on one side, stacked, and left
for around 24 hours.
They are then salted on the other side, stacked
and left for a further 24 hours. Then the joints are rinsed in plenty
of water to remove the excess salt, and dried in the open air for
a period varying between three and ten days, depending on the weather.
After some further processing, the meat is hung up to dry again,
this time in the shade and spaced out so that the joints do not
a touch one another.
After 3-6 days, they are covered with a paste of
ground spices known as çemen, and left to cure for 10-24
hours in hot weather, and 1-2 days in cold weather. Then the excess
çemen is removed, leaving a thin layer, and the joints dried
again. Finally the Pastirma is ready for the table.
The çemen paste covering the slabs of Pastirma
is both an important factor in the flavour, and protects the meat
from drying and spoiling by contact with the air, which would cause
the fat in the Pastirma to oxidise and give a bitter flavour.
Çemen is composed of crushed classical fenugreek
seeds, garlic and chilli pepper mixed to a paste with a little water.
Çemen paste is also sold separately as a savoury paste for
spreading on bread. When buying Pastirma, note that the redder the
colour, the fresher the Pastirma. Over time it takes on a browner
tone, and becomes firmer in texture. Good quality Pastirma, whether
fresh or mature, is delicious, and it is only a matter of taste
which you prefer.

Gourmets do not approve of Pastirma sliced by machine
but insist on the thin slices being cut by hand with a sharp meat
knife. They also reject ready cut slices of Pastirma as sold packaged
in some delicatessens and supermarkets. Pastirma is delicious with
fresh crusty bread, grilled lightly over charcoal, fried in butter
with eggs or in layered pastry börek. Haricot bean stew with
pieces of Pastirma is another popular dish in Turkey.
Pastirma is a favourite meze with raky, Turkey’s
national aniseed drink. If you visit one of the meyhanes (taverns)
in Beyo?lu in Istanbul, do not forget to try the delicious paçanga
börek made with Pastirma.
* Mustafa Çetinkaya is a photographer
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