My college chemistry classes used hot sand to heat fluids too! It’s more even heating than you’d get with a bare hot plate, safer than an open flame, and cleaner than an oil bath.
@@0631ix if u like coffee with milk, Turkish coffee is not for u. Turkish coffee is bitter. sweetened with sugar. It has an idiosyncratic taste, It's unlike any other coffee. Turks usually don't add milk to Turkish coffee, but I love it. U should try it
It's a shame that human civilization is going into a borg assimilation state. We are all the same. We are also all different, and it's great to appreciate that
I wouldn't be surprised if this was their way of making coffee a long time ago, without making a fire, just go outside put your brewer in the hot sand, and there you go, hot coffee.
American here who recently discovered an amazing Turkish restaurant in my new city of residence and I loved the Turkish coffee. Everything from the presentation to the taste blew me away, it is leagues better than any form of western coffee, which is good in its own right.
As a consumer of both "western" and Turkish coffee styles, I can say that they don't replace each other. You don't drink Turkish coffee while you work, do something with your hands, or even watch TV. It has to be served in its special cup and saucer, otherwise it has no taste. It is not that good if you are not with some company either! Finally, it is best just after the meals. Other types of filtered or pressure forced coffee types are nice while you work or in the middle of the day with milk and other stuff. I like them all, I can't say one is better than the other!
Ah! There's a difference from how my grandma used to make it: when it boiled the first time she would take it off the heat, knock it a couple of times on the table for the bubbles to go down, put it back on the heat and boil it a second time, knock it again, then boil it a third time, and only then she would pour it in the cup. Same sort of pot and cup but no sand though, she would make it on the ashes in the fireplace. She was Greek by the way but born and raised in Bursa, Turkey. Lovely place, lovely people.
I'm saying this as a turkish man. Turkish coffee is very special for us. we have an idiom about it; one cup of turkish coffee has respect for 40 years. It means that if you serve a cup of turkish coffee to someone, they will appreciate that and will be thankful even if he/she is a thief or killer or etc. so noone will stole them (on the other hand, they are not expensive. you can buy this cup for 2-3 dollars in Turkey).
We Japanese love Turkey.I am Japanese.On September 16, 1890,An Ottoman ship Ertuğrul Fırkateyni was wrecked in the sea near Japan. Most of the people on the boat were many thrown into the sea because of the storm. Japanese people rescued the Turks thrown into the sea.The Japanese continued to rescue the Turks without rest. 69 Turks have been rescued.Japan treated the injured many Turks who were saved. The Japanese gave the Turkish a warm meal every day. So many Japanese donated money to save the Turks.The Japanese loved and cared for the 69 Turkish people.The Turks injury has healed. And Japan sent the survivors of the Turks safely to the Ottoman Empire.The 69 Turks were able to reunite with their beloved family and friends. The Japanese love Turkish , memorial ceremonies are still held for Turkish people who have died.
@Nosferatu Zodd We Japanese sent 9,000 cherry blossom trees to Germany in 1990. It is said that the money of this cherry blossom trees is gathered by the donation of the Japanese and bought a cherry blossom trees . Almost all Japanese people participated in donations. The Japanese always cooperate with Germany.This cherry blossom tree is still in Berlin. This is a story that Japanese people helped Germans in japanese Okinawa Miyakojima, Japan. In 1873, the German Merchant shipRobertoson was hit by a typhoon.The ship was aground off Miyakojima Miyakokuni. At that time, the islander rescues the crew.They gave some food to the Germans.They gave Germans a place to sleep. The days were 34 days.And the islanders put a lot of food and water on the ship and sent the Germans to Germany safely.There are still monuments sent from Germany in Okinawa.
Coffee is all about how you like it. Most people, me included, use milk and sugar to offset a specific taste we don't like, be it bitterness or sourness. But all those depend on variables like bean type, roast (as in light or dark roast), brew method (where Turkish is just a method), grind size (try making a Turkish coffee with a coarse grind for example), and so much, much more. Even altitude when it comes to espresso for example. I recently found acid free beans from India and the way I brew them, as an espresso, I drink it black too. But that doesn't make it the "correct" way. There is no correct way. Correct is always personal.
Well of course, Starbucks is cheap coffee burnt to high hell to cover up how cheap and crappy it is and marketed as "high quality" but it's so bad you have to drown it in so many flavorings just to make it drinkable.
I miss turkey! I went to alanya back in 2014 was beautiful! I can't drink to much coffee makes my heart race but I risked just a little to try this style was worth it! Much love ♥️
It’s the coffeine and it also helps me when I get an attack. How did you find out? I looked at the ingredients of the only medicine that helped me and found out it’s largely coffeine.
@@justaguy1878 if you count starbacks and similar brands as coffee then its ridiculous. I see starbacks coffee like a hot chocolate shop, the best coffee comes from Colombia and Brazil, and thats not even the point if you put icing, caramel and all those sort of things, you ruin the whole coffee you can have the colombian coffee in ut home but if you make it like that its shit. I m not saying everyone in the US drinks it like that i ve been and seen people drink it regularly like this. Starbacks=McDonalds in food..
@@Terr0rMKD starbuck if you are saying, but you dont know starbuck in my country is more like pizzahut in italia. If you assume starbuck is the best choice in the west so you are whole wrong
@@osmanceylan Well if your friend let you do that then good for you, since you take icing on the cake away from them 😄. My friend would break my hand if I take their luqum 😂😂 As for me, I don't drink coffee with suger or any savory but when it is surved with luqum I just like it with the coffee. As if the taste changes for some reasons.
@@foreign_h He was talking about the sand, not the person. If you've been to a beach with no shoes on, the sand the before ocean is very hot, so he must be using that sand for his drinks (because it is hot, get it?). I hope this helped you understand the joke, and restore your faith in humanity a little.
I know that sand can conducting heat. My guess is that the heating time for the coffee caused by cooking with sand is giving the coffee a more unique taste? I dunno.
Is the sand heated and I work with some guys from Istanbul they are amazing I hope everyone is ok with the earthquake and they told me about swarma I wanna try some of that!!
The way of making this coffee is so unique and the cups are fancy af. I would try it someday if I had a chance. And I am also interested does it taste differently from just put the grounded coffee in the boiling water? I guess the way of heating it in sand will produce extra amount of bubbles, so to make coffee taste more gentle?
I am not a coffee drinker, but watching anyone who takes pride in their craft or work is just awesome. This is one of the coolest ways I have seen coffee made. Does aanyone know why the sand? Efficient, consistent heating? Looks cool? No open flames allowed? All of the above?
The biggest difference of coffee in sand is that it cooks more slowly compared to other Turkish coffee cooking methods. Because it cooks slowly, coffee and water are thoroughly intertwined and cooked. For this reason, a more delicious coffee is obtained.
That’s how coffee has been made for at least a thousand years in Ethiopia. Not everyone’s cup of tea (coffee) but you should definitely try it, if you get the opportunity.
Hi :) I enjoyed watching the video you uploaded. I have a question What do you call the "square frame with hot sand" at 0:12? I would appreciate your reply. Thank you.
It's basically a really old way of making espresso. The grinds have to be extra fine to use this method. Can't use thick grinds because you won't get all the caffeine
th-cam.com/video/OxH23-nond8/w-d-xo.html Slm ben Fransadan Türkiyeyi tanıtmak için videolar yaptım. Bana yardımcı olabilirmisiniz paylaşarak ve abone olarak teşekür ederim 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷
th-cam.com/video/OxH23-nond8/w-d-xo.html Slm ben Fransadan Türkiyeyi tanıtmak için videolar yaptım. Bana yardımcı olabilirmisiniz paylaşarak ve abone olarak teşekür ederim 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷
It took some time but it is an interesting way to make some thick looking Turkish coffee with so much cleanliness! Hope to go to Istanbul one day and its streets !!! Its so beautiful since Piyasa Cadesi Ziyagil Mansion Ask-i Memnu... 😭❤ 11:40pm 1.4.2024
My college chemistry classes used hot sand to heat fluids too! It’s more even heating than you’d get with a bare hot plate, safer than an open flame, and cleaner than an oil bath.
@BFF lol
@BFF i bet it take alot less enregy to heating all the sand take alot gas or electricity
So, what's the taste like?
Until someone’s touches the sand maybe?
@@0631ix if u like coffee with milk, Turkish coffee is not for u. Turkish coffee is bitter. sweetened with sugar. It has an idiosyncratic taste, It's unlike any other coffee. Turks usually don't add milk to Turkish coffee, but I love it. U should try it
A street vendor with pride. Attention to detail. Even the cup and saucer looks elegant. The foam is a big part of the experience.
That plastic water pitcher didn't look very elegant to me. Nor his chair. Nor his clothes.
@@aokaze-minotaur How about the cup and saucer? Will you give him that?
@@aokaze-minotaurit looks elegant for a street vendor what ya want him to wear a suit? 💀
apropriately enough- the foam is called a "crown"
What about the XL gum scraper
There are an endless amount of unique concepts in this world
this is a very nice comment
It's a shame that human civilization is going into a borg assimilation state. We are all the same. We are also all different, and it's great to appreciate that
as opposed to most worlds
I wouldn't be surprised if this was their way of making coffee a long time ago, without making a fire, just go outside put your brewer in the hot sand, and there you go, hot coffee.
Any scientific facts using sand to make coffee?
You can tell this guy loves what he does. Seems to take great pride in cleanliness & his movement is on point.
His posture as well is on point.
Matthew Williford you haven’t seen nothing
soolly 357 he uses pre-ground coffee...
You read my mind brother
@Matthew Williford then you've never seen serious critics
American here who recently discovered an amazing Turkish restaurant in my new city of residence and I loved the Turkish coffee. Everything from the presentation to the taste blew me away, it is leagues better than any form of western coffee, which is good in its own right.
Makes me wonder what "western" coffee you had
As a consumer of both "western" and Turkish coffee styles, I can say that they don't replace each other. You don't drink Turkish coffee while you work, do something with your hands, or even watch TV. It has to be served in its special cup and saucer, otherwise it has no taste. It is not that good if you are not with some company either! Finally, it is best just after the meals. Other types of filtered or pressure forced coffee types are nice while you work or in the middle of the day with milk and other stuff. I like them all, I can't say one is better than the other!
All coffee methods are valid.
@@ysakgul I don`t need a loud company to enjoy a great cup of coffee.
@@cavanray6742Greek coffee is wack imo
Ah! There's a difference from how my grandma used to make it: when it boiled the first time she would take it off the heat, knock it a couple of times on the table for the bubbles to go down, put it back on the heat and boil it a second time, knock it again, then boil it a third time, and only then she would pour it in the cup. Same sort of pot and cup but no sand though, she would make it on the ashes in the fireplace. She was Greek by the way but born and raised in Bursa, Turkey. Lovely place, lovely people.
Is your grandmother from Bursa? same city sea .. :D :D :D
@@MehmetYank Prousa not Bursa 😉
@@Kardasi I can't see the name Prousa when I open the map, man.
@@Kardasi it’s the same thing eventually. bursa is the way how turkish ppl pronounce it. no need to make a big deal out of it 🤨.
God please decrease gold price it helps to increase jewellery sales
A pro. I definitely would have gotten sand in there. Definitely.
So delicious! Thanks for watching 😊
@@AlaaStarves j4i3i3j3juu3quq3iq4iq4q31k3jq4jq4m..
Qjajajjw I kkkwjwk>2i8iohhjjjo998877888iibhi97778
K3iiq9
Johnathan Minella callese el hocico
That just means you're serving it "country-style".
@@wonderfullife8520 i like it
There's far too many people in this comments section that aren't capable of pouring a drink without spilling it.
😐
😆
Or maybe, I know it's a stretch and requires you to use your brain, they're just joking around trying to make others laugh
@@goodguyguan3412 Oh man the irony.
You seriously think he's exceptional for pouring slowly, with that handy spout?
he didnt waste a single drop, such artisan work, truly a delight to watch
Look at 1:33 - 1:36 . A few drop were wasted
^ proof why the world isn’t perfect
I read this comment at 1:33 and saw a wasted drop lmao
Two drops of water wasted @ 0:43 and two drops of coffee @ 1:33
I agree, well except for the drop 😁
I would not trust customers with those cool coffee cups.
Especially in the US. They'd think they have the freedom to own it since they already paid. Lol
I'm saying this as a turkish man. Turkish coffee is very special for us. we have an idiom about it; one cup of turkish coffee has respect for 40 years. It means that if you serve a cup of turkish coffee to someone, they will appreciate that and will be thankful even if he/she is a thief or killer or etc. so noone will stole them (on the other hand, they are not expensive. you can buy this cup for 2-3 dollars in Turkey).
@@lycaonn Three dollars is a lot for such a cup of coffee~
In Italy we can buy coffe for 1 euro
@@tizio2332 lol in our country coffee is only 20 cents
We Japanese love Turkey.I am Japanese.On September 16, 1890,An Ottoman ship Ertuğrul Fırkateyni was wrecked in the sea near Japan. Most of the people on the boat were many thrown into the sea because of the storm.
Japanese people rescued the Turks thrown into the sea.The Japanese continued to rescue the Turks without rest. 69 Turks have been rescued.Japan treated the injured many Turks who were saved. The Japanese gave the Turkish a warm meal every day. So many Japanese donated money to save the Turks.The Japanese loved and cared for the 69 Turkish people.The Turks injury has healed.
And Japan sent the survivors of the Turks safely to the Ottoman Empire.The 69 Turks were able to reunite with their beloved family and friends.
The Japanese love Turkish , memorial ceremonies are still held for Turkish people who have died.
Thank you, Turks love you very much, you are brothers
kardeş ülke JAPONYA
@Nosferatu Zodd We Japanese sent 9,000 cherry blossom trees to Germany in 1990. It is said that the money of this cherry blossom trees is gathered by the donation of the Japanese and bought a cherry blossom trees . Almost all Japanese people participated in donations. The Japanese always cooperate with Germany.This cherry blossom tree is still in Berlin.
This is a story that Japanese people helped Germans in japanese Okinawa Miyakojima, Japan. In 1873, the German Merchant shipRobertoson was hit by a typhoon.The ship was aground off Miyakojima Miyakokuni. At that time, the islander rescues the crew.They gave some food to the Germans.They gave Germans a place to sleep. The days were 34 days.And the islanders put a lot of food and water on the ship and sent the Germans to Germany safely.There are still monuments sent from Germany in Okinawa.
@Nosferatu Zodd Germany is very difficult with my brother, Germany doesn't like us political
*implying your opinion represents the entire japanese populace*
Ooh, I love Turkish coffee. I make it myself, with freshly ground coffee, but I would love to try it in the traditional setting, made like this.
How u made at home
My Turkish coffee pot has been in my litter box for 10 mins and nothing's happening. What am I doing wrong?
Shit happens 😂
Make sure to use a good quality brand
Why I didn't laugh at your joke?
@@anastasiastellar2658 I did 😊😊
@@anastasiastellar2658 I did(2)
Thank you for like coffee. I am coffee farmer.
I subbed to see your stuff :)
Me also - subscribe for more.
@@RoboSlickProductions thank you for your support. I have sub to your channel
My grandfather was the Edmund Fitzgerald~
Hooray for coffee!!!
As a Turk i claim that this is the best technique to cook coffee. This is pure coffee. No mixture, no milk, no syrups. Just coffee
That's how most coffee is all around the world. Except US
Looks delicious
Agree, did you mix coffee with sugar before boiled or no?
Coffee is all about how you like it. Most people, me included, use milk and sugar to offset a specific taste we don't like, be it bitterness or sourness.
But all those depend on variables like bean type, roast (as in light or dark roast), brew method (where Turkish is just a method), grind size (try making a Turkish coffee with a coarse grind for example), and so much, much more. Even altitude when it comes to espresso for example.
I recently found acid free beans from India and the way I brew them, as an espresso, I drink it black too.
But that doesn't make it the "correct" way. There is no correct way. Correct is always personal.
@@eccomi21 acid free beans ? Are they lower acidity by any chance ? What's the name of the beans? Thank you in advance.
I love this coffee when I lived in nYC I had it for the first time!!! So good 😁☕️👍🏽
I would love to go to Istanbul to see this happen. Imagine the feeling of the heat and the smell of the coffee.
You may be able to get it locally. Check out Middle Eastern restaurants.
@HORUS Being Middle Eastern and being Eurasian are not exclusive traits. Turkey is middle eastern AND Eurasian
And taste of the sand
2:52-2:59, that's precision.
exactly. We Turks know this job well.
@@ercanteke7597 damn bro chill, who hurt you?
@@ercanteke7597 your mom dont love you... how sad
@@liftingturtle1055 He have right....
@@ercanteke7597 You are right bro sad but true....
You can’t get this kind of quality at Starbucks
Starbucks is a science lab of chemicals your body dosent need
Starbuck more branded
Fuck starbucks
Well of course, Starbucks is cheap coffee burnt to high hell to cover up how cheap and crappy it is and marketed as "high quality" but it's so bad you have to drown it in so many flavorings just to make it drinkable.
@@djrevue4106 exactly what chemicals do they add to their coffee?
I love Turkish coffee! It’s the best! Pure gold!
This is the best cup of coffee I've never tasted!
Subscribe now and get a cookie 😜
Even the sand is absolutely clean!
I miss turkey! I went to alanya back in 2014 was beautiful! I can't drink to much coffee makes my heart race but I risked just a little to try this style was worth it! Much love ♥️
Why don't you try decaffeinated beans with the same technique?
Turkish coffee....the smoothest coffee i've ever tasted.
Actually we don't call this coffe Turkish coffe. We call it Dibek coffe (Dibek kahvesi).. Turkish coffe more stronger than that
Really? Have you taste coffee from Indonesia? Aceh Coffee is the best Coffee in The World brother 😁👍
@@musaboney7755 agree with you. Turkish coffees tasted strong. And taste like cloves a little bit. My throat could not take it
@@musaboney7755 What makes the Turkish Coffe even stronger than this?
That's so neat and the cups are so pretty.
This was an absolute pleasure to watch!
This is really amazing. I’ve been practicing a lot because I found out it helps prevent or relieve my migraine attacks whenever I have a cup of this
It’s the coffeine and it also helps me when I get an attack. How did you find out? I looked at the ingredients of the only medicine that helped me and found out it’s largely coffeine.
It's sad that you have to avoid tourist scams in Istanbul and then you miss great street vendors like this guy.
What's so great about it though?
As far as I can see he just heated the sand to heat the coffee instead of heating the coffee directly.
Scammers anywhere around the world should be shot.
@@Marqan Well it is Turkish coffee and it is heated in the sand. But I haven't tried so I can't tell what is the difference.
What do the scammers do ? And what prevents someone from walking by the scammers to get coffee from this guy?
@@Marqan You don't know the cultural significance of that tradition.... I see you're not a man of culture.
Best video ever! Thanks
This is pretty much how everyone in the Balkans are doing it, i mean except for the sand everything else is the same, you hardly find this in the west
What are they doing it for if I may know?
Yeah you hardly find this in the west, where the best coffe come from lul
@@justaguy1878 if you count starbacks and similar brands as coffee then its ridiculous. I see starbacks coffee like a hot chocolate shop, the best coffee comes from Colombia and Brazil, and thats not even the point if you put icing, caramel and all those sort of things, you ruin the whole coffee you can have the colombian coffee in ut home but if you make it like that its shit. I m not saying everyone in the US drinks it like that i ve been and seen people drink it regularly like this. Starbacks=McDonalds in food..
@@Terr0rMKD starbuck if you are saying, but you dont know starbuck in my country is more like pizzahut in italia. If you assume starbuck is the best choice in the west so you are whole wrong
@@justaguy1878 u might be right. Sorry forgot about Italy too lol top 3 best coffee makers
Those cups are gorgeous. Nothing beats a beautiful, colorful, and for me...a floral coffee cup. The coffee inside is only half the equation.
The movements that he made in the sand tell me how classy and educated this person is. Truly an artist.
I dunno about his education or how his sand movements would que anyone in on that
@@imhere1303 No no, you don’t get it. Only classy & smart people can be good at art.
name lmao
@@ineedaname5928 Only the classiest and smartest sniff their own farts.
gay
Idk why but it feels so satisfying while watching this video.
Turkish coffee is great. Must try. Thanks for the video.
Even though I am not a fan of Turkish coffee. But when they serve it with Turkish luqum on the side I like it.
I don't like the coffee myself but I feed on the things my friends are given alongside the coffee lol
@@osmanceylan
Well if your friend let you do that then good for you, since you take icing on the cake away from them 😄. My friend would break my hand if I take their luqum 😂😂
As for me, I don't drink coffee with suger or any savory but when it is surved with luqum I just like it with the coffee. As if the taste changes for some reasons.
This is how coffe throughout the Balkans has been made for centuries except for the sand part
Just boiled in a cup over fire then ?
@@tobuscusfoop yup, over a stove and it's called turkish
so
Especially the Sand part is very known in the Balkans. In Greece we call it Kafes sti Hovoli and it is very old school to find this!
@@aleksijevujovic7262 Yes, we stole it from you since coffee is the main plant of Balkans... Budala
ماشأاﷲ
Smart work
This guy probably got the sand from the beach that burned my feet last summer
@@foreign_h He was talking about the sand, not the person. If you've been to a beach with no shoes on, the sand the before ocean is very hot, so he must be using that sand for his drinks (because it is hot, get it?). I hope this helped you understand the joke, and restore your faith in humanity a little.
Joke
@@Chucktea23 thanks
now i will love to drink Turkish Coffee, nice Video Alaa Starves, can I use this video in Virtual Tour-Thank You
I’m imagining Private Gump saying: “Magic sand”
XD
beautiful cup set!I bet that coffee is delicious 😋
i am coffee-man.and this video is very satisfying
That is very interesting 🧐 I may try this
Not saying that because i am turkish but we have one of the best coffees in the world. Its not only the taste. Its like drinking turkish culture.
Yes I agree
Bullshit
Beautiful ! You have prompted me to contact some Lebanese freinds I have lost touch with. Thanks and cheers from Australia.
I know that sand can conducting heat. My guess is that the heating time for the coffee caused by cooking with sand is giving the coffee a more unique taste? I dunno.
Not lol.. Nothing different
WOW that's awesome ☺️☺️☺️
Excellent video. I also made turkish coffee
03:31 I was was waiting for it to be poured into the camera!
Oh shit a wild Code Palace
@@Karuni7 How did you find me?
This is quite interesting it's nice to see how other countries do coffee
oooo this looks fancy,and the motions the vendor make are elegant and refined, keep being fancy turkey, this coffee looks delicious.
Beautiful! Thank you to the camera person for keeping the camera pointed at the cup so we could watch the whole process while it heated 🙂👍.
Thanks for the video. Have a great day.
Is there any difference in taste? I mean if i took the same coffee and boil the water in a stove, will it taste different from this sand technique?
It looks like a gimmick
Little difference in taste. They're selling entertainment in making coffee. It's more unique compared to some.
@@lei2837 so there are a difference in taste, that makes me want to try it, is that like a special sand or any regular sand wouldnt be a problem
Is the sand heated and I work with some guys from Istanbul they are amazing I hope everyone is ok with the earthquake and they told me about swarma I wanna try some of that!!
It takes a lot of time to boil but it looks so delicious 😋
It took only 2 minutes and 10 seconds.
It's really fast and simple preparation 😂
This is espresso is soo exotic 🥺
Lol imagine wondering what the sand is for and then putting your hand in it ouch
It's like watching an art perfected thousand of years through pilgrims of the silk road
The way of making this coffee is so unique and the cups are fancy af. I would try it someday if I had a chance.
And I am also interested does it taste differently from just put the grounded coffee in the boiling water? I guess the way of heating it in sand will produce extra amount of bubbles, so to make coffee taste more gentle?
Wow ,that cup of coffee looks really yummy.
Ülkeme kurban olaam bee❤
Sebep?
what a beautiful, warm coffee
It looks like a strong shot of coffee.
And it is
To me it looks creamy
I looks bitter...i might put sugar in it
@@charlesdarlin3281 you can put sugar inside while its boiling or before
Indeed a coffee lover
Its an art, love the technique. I love coffee..simply amazing..😍
now I want to travel to Istanbul to taste this coffee there
Se ve delicioso
Felicidades
Saludos 🇲🇽
A place I have always wished t travel to. if I ever am so blessed, I want to find this man and taste that heavenly elixir!!
can someone explain this technique and it's benefits?
idk culture maybe
I think it provides more even heating, not sure. Also where I live it's common to see people roasting groundnuts in sand
@@ofareh nope. It's the first time i am seeing that
トルココーヒーを作る動画は時々見たくなる
I tried this once before. Great taste, even the grounds were tasty
even the cup was tasty!
Even the man was tasty!!
@@skeetsmcgrew3282 😂
Coffee, kopi, ngopi mantap
I am not a coffee drinker, but watching anyone who takes pride in their craft or work is just awesome. This is one of the coolest ways I have seen coffee made. Does aanyone know why the sand? Efficient, consistent heating? Looks cool? No open flames allowed? All of the above?
The biggest difference of coffee in sand is that it cooks more slowly compared to other Turkish coffee cooking methods. Because it cooks slowly, coffee and water are thoroughly intertwined and cooked. For this reason, a more delicious coffee is obtained.
I’d love to try Turkish coffee..
That’s how coffee has been made for at least a thousand years in Ethiopia. Not everyone’s cup of tea (coffee) but you should definitely try it, if you get the opportunity.
I’ve always had filtered coffee, is it grainy?
Hi :)
I enjoyed watching the video you uploaded.
I have a question
What do you call the "square frame with hot sand" at 0:12?
I would appreciate your reply.
Thank you.
Anakin will hate this coffee for sure
Lmao
definitely doesn't have the high ground
@@justins21482 rwwooshh/ anakin once said " I don't like sand"
I find this comment coarse and irritating.
@@TheCarlosbarajas cant even spell "woooosh" right
Selam. Turkish coffee! Thank you.
Tourist: What's your secret?
Replies in Turkish: "Taster's Choice"
No waste...nice work
I don't know how much the coffee cost but what I see is love in this cup of coffee.
smiles.. in the description..
I'm envious to taste the real thing. I have turkish coffee maker but it's electric 🥲
thank u for sharing, they said its tasty, havent tried though, kapeng barako parin ang paborito. sana one day matry ko to.
Hahaha
those cups are to die forrrr 😍
Oh I'd love to try Turkish coffee, it sounds so lovely.
I've tried it. My throat could not swallow it. Turkish coffee taste like there are cloves in it
Have you ever been in a Turkish prison?
I’d love to try Turkish coffee it looks fantastic.
My eyes could be deceiving me, but this just looks like an archaic way of heatjng up instant coffee...
Same bro... I was like.... Is he just pouring the grounds in there ?
It's basically a really old way of making espresso. The grinds have to be extra fine to use this method. Can't use thick grinds because you won't get all the caffeine
@@edd868 so you're ingesting the finely ground bean as well
yeah, it's nescafe decaf instant powder. they cook it in a hot litter box.
@@FL-gg4dq the grounds, which is like a fine powder like flour, settle to the bottom of the coffee cup.
Selam Turkiye. Thank you. Grandfather Turkish.
i love turkish coffee from bangladesh❤️
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Slm ben Fransadan Türkiyeyi tanıtmak için videolar yaptım. Bana yardımcı olabilirmisiniz paylaşarak ve abone olarak teşekür ederim 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷
Afiyet olsun 🥰
Enjoy your meal? Or is there other uses for that phrase?
Un saludo Mexicano
Cuanta arte en un cafe!
th-cam.com/video/OxH23-nond8/w-d-xo.html
Slm ben Fransadan Türkiyeyi tanıtmak için videolar yaptım. Bana yardımcı olabilirmisiniz paylaşarak ve abone olarak teşekür ederim 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷
mmmm I could taste the grains in this very delicious.
Never seen suck a clean street vendor in my life
Now that is a beautiful cup of coffee.
A cup of that coffee and a strong local cigarette . Breakfast of champion's.
You do your breakfast with cigarette? Weird
@@yudhaadi764 and unhealty
I'd love to try that 👍
Just by his clean counter and cups I would love to get a cup from him.
It took some time but it is an interesting way to make some thick looking Turkish coffee with so much cleanliness! Hope to go to Istanbul one day and its streets !!! Its so beautiful since Piyasa Cadesi Ziyagil Mansion Ask-i Memnu... 😭❤ 11:40pm 1.4.2024