Quantcast
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2213

Macun – a sweet, colorful candy and more

Fethiye Times - LOVE-FETHIYE

When you hear the words “street food” in Turkey they conjure up images of döner kebab (meat or chicken cooked on a vertical rotisserie), simit (circular sesame-crusted bread), balık ekmek (fried or grilled fish inside a loaf of bread), midye dolma (stuffed mussels) lokma (fried sweet dough covered in syrup), mısır (freshly boiled or grilled corn on the cob) to name a few.

There’s another street food that you may have “walked past and wondered” on more than one occasion.

Macun

Macun is a soft, sweet toffee-like paste that comes in a variety of colorful flavors. The vendors (macuncu) serve it from a traditional circular container with separate triangular-shaped compartments for each flavor.

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.
Macun - a sweet, colorful candy and more
Macun at the Yeşilüzümlü Mushroom Festival earlier this year. Photograph by Nichola Chapman

The macun is scooped with a macuncu mablaği or macunkeș, which is shaped like a screwdriver, and wrapped round a small stick, like a lollipop. This can be done with alternate flavors, creating a striped sweet.

You might think it was something that might only appeal to children, but give it a try and you’ll be surprised by its honey-sweet and spicy taste.

And …macun is a lot more than just a sweet, colorful candy.

Macun originated from spicy preparations of Mesir macunu, a traditional herbal paste and, according to legend, is made of forty-one ingredients, aiming to heal forty-one ailments. 

It is prepared with a many herbs, spices and flavoring ingredients including amber, musk, crimson, turmeric, ginger, clover, cinnamon, nutmeg, vanilla, coconut, bergamot, mastic, mint, rose, lemon and plum.

In the past, macun was consumed as a pharmaceutical medicine as it was purported to have therapeutic effects to give the body strength and to calm one’s spirit

Turkish Macun also known as Mesir Macunu or Mesir Paste is also known for its aphrodisiac properties.

Next time you’re enjoying one of the many festivals that take place in Turkey, watch out for the macuncu and give macun a try.

Sources: Wikipedia/grandturkishbazaar.com/Balkon3

The post Macun – a sweet, colorful candy and more appeared first on Fethiye Times.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2213

Trending Articles