Tiny But Mighty Turkish Dumplings (Manti)

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  • Опубліковано 28 чер 2024
  • If you like dumplings, you will love this manti recipe. Thank you Bokksu for sponsoring this video! Use my code ANDONG15 at partner.bokksu.com/mynameisan... to get $15 off your first Bokksu order!
    Every country has its favorite dumpling, and this is Turkey's: Manti! How to make manti at home? Let me show you with this manti recipe. These dumplings are tiny but mighty.
    Ramadan mubarak ❤️
    🥟 Manti Recipe
    240g flour
    1/2 tsp salt
    2 eggs
    2 Tbsp water
    200g ground beef
    1/2 ground onion
    1/2 small clove garlic
    40 cracks of black pepper (1 tsp)
    1/4 tsp cumin powder
    1/2 tsp chili powder
    1/2 tsp salt (or to taste)
    50g butter
    2 tsp smoked paprika
    4-6 Tbsp yogurt
    parsley
    ❤️ Become a Patron and support this channel!
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    📷 Andong on Instagram
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    Created & Hosted by Andong
    Edited by Sarah Binder
    / sajo_binder
    Channel Producer Grace Phan-Nguyen
    / phantagepoint
    Spanish subtitles by Daniel González
    / danielgonzalezlombardi
    00:00 Intro
    00:38 Dough
    1:34 Filling
    2:36 Dough Cont.
    3:30 Bokksu Sponsorship
    4:49 Filling Manti
    5:37 Folding Manti
    6:30 Simple Sauce
    6:53 Cooking Manti
    7:19 How to plate and serve Manti
  • Навчання та стиль

КОМЕНТАРІ • 290

  • @Axolot2705
    @Axolot2705 2 роки тому +302

    Add some garlic to the yogurt and sprinkle some dried mint on top of the plate it would be phenomenal

    • @mynameisandong
      @mynameisandong  2 роки тому +44

      Love it

    • @59BRN
      @59BRN 2 роки тому +54

      Garlic isn't optional. 😌

    • @kokekokez694
      @kokekokez694 2 роки тому +1

      오늘도 수준있
      youtuuu.tokyo/nvkNYnrfkpj
      는 강의. 잘 들었

    • @TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight
      @TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight 2 роки тому +12

      @@59BRN My rule of thumb is, “If a cuisine doesn’t have alliums (garlic, onion, leek, etc.), then it isn’t worth my time.”

    • @tolga1cool
      @tolga1cool 2 роки тому +5

      Garlic in the yogurt is most definitely not optional

  • @Headchrusherdeth
    @Headchrusherdeth 2 роки тому +136

    Woo we finally got an episode about mantı, it's basically a delicacy as far as i'm concerned and one of my favorite meals here in Turkey

    • @kokekokez694
      @kokekokez694 2 роки тому

      일이 나
      youtuuu.tokyo/zFOxddmfBgi
      열 할 수 없는 훌륭한 많

  • @alicetwain
    @alicetwain 2 роки тому +32

    To prevent the dough going dry, roll it in a clean tablecloth (lay the rolled dough on the tablecloth, cover with the end of the tablecloth, and roll up so that the dough is protected on each side and two layers of dough don't tough each other). Unroll bit by bit, cut just 1-2 strips of skins and seal them before unrolling more.

  • @SuitedCynic
    @SuitedCynic 2 роки тому +22

    Whenever my frozen and dried stock of Manti is close to running out, I sound the alarm and my girlfriend is kind of tired of my sh.t but hear me out: you boil them until they are tender and serve them with diluted tomato paste and yogurt with *raw* crushed garlic and you are in for a treat that will have YOU sound the alarm whenever your stock of Manti is showing signs of running out.

  • @TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight
    @TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight 2 роки тому +11

    My Turkish friend told me that manti is sometimes considered as a test of marital worthiness. As in, if your gf can make manti so small that you can fit 40 in the same spoon, then she’s the one.

    • @smavi4133
      @smavi4133 2 роки тому +4

      Yeah, only in Kayseri though

  • @Auratrice
    @Auratrice 2 роки тому +42

    that really would've been the recipe to get a turkish grandma to collab for - it feels like in berlin every season there will be at least one family in your friend circle who makes a big batch and takes orders from all the friends

    • @Getpojke
      @Getpojke 2 роки тому +13

      She's not a grandma but I've thought for a long time now that a collab between Andong & Refika over at Refikas Kitchen would be great. Both have a great attitude to food & life & make great food.

    • @kokekokez694
      @kokekokez694 2 роки тому

      대사님 대표님같
      youtuuu.tokyo/W3Uq52hVNco
      이 정의로운

    • @smavi4133
      @smavi4133 2 роки тому +1

      @@Getpojke refika is basically andong with a wig

  • @burgerguy2974
    @burgerguy2974 2 роки тому +92

    My parents are from Kazakhstan so they grew up with Manti, I as a result thought Manti were Russian, but I later learned they were Turkish! Doesn't Matter though, because they are still the best dumplings I've ever eaten.

    • @DonJuan911
      @DonJuan911 2 роки тому +15

      It's a multinational dish. It probably is Turkish but just like many dishes it is present in many cultures. It's like Baklava or other middle Eastern dishes.

    • @alexanderfo3886
      @alexanderfo3886 2 роки тому +18

      @@DonJuan911 Especially in the Soviet Era, Russians quite happily adopted Central Asian Dishes like plov, shashlik etc. because this area belonged to the Soviet Union. So I guess it would be rather surprising if the hadn't adopted this most delicious one.

    • @Mistirina
      @Mistirina 2 роки тому +8

      "Kazakh" style Manti are actually closer to Korean Mandu or king´s Mandu, except the filling :D

    • @MukhamediyarRaiymbek
      @MukhamediyarRaiymbek 2 роки тому +11

      Kazakh here. Manty that we make in Kazakhstan are neither Russian nor Turkish. It's the local version of a dish that comes from Chinese cuisine. You can clearly see the similarities if you take a closer look.

    • @ismetyalimalatli7581
      @ismetyalimalatli7581 2 роки тому +5

      @@MukhamediyarRaiymbek that probably is the original source. Remember, our ancestors came from that region too. It is rather likely that they carried the tradition, or maybe it should be called approach, all the way to Anatolia and beyond.

  • @SamirHusainy
    @SamirHusainy 2 роки тому +53

    There is an Uzbeki dumpling called Manti as well. Those are dope.

    • @mynameisandong
      @mynameisandong  2 роки тому +27

      The word (or an etymological relative) is used from Eastern Europe all the way to Koea :)

    • @SamirHusainy
      @SamirHusainy 2 роки тому +36

      @@mynameisandong food culture is amazing like that. Plov/pilaf/pilau. Samsa/samosa. It's a part of the silk road

    • @berdansargol1577
      @berdansargol1577 2 роки тому +3

      I ate Uzbek mantı at a restaurant in Istanbul and I should say, it's phenomenal. It's, in my opinion, definitely better than the Turkish mantı.

    • @karmesindryade
      @karmesindryade 2 роки тому +8

      @@SamirHusainy Oh yes. If all people would come together and share their food traditions and see how everything connects and learn from each other, eat and drink and laugh... then the world might have a chance ☮🕊

    • @SamirHusainy
      @SamirHusainy 2 роки тому +5

      @@karmesindryade I totally agree; make dolmas not bombs. Unfortunately, dolmas aren't as profitable as bombs, and the US isn't interested in peace because it hurts too many stock portfolios.

  • @samethakangulmez1154
    @samethakangulmez1154 2 роки тому +29

    Dude that dish looks amazing. I think you must make another food in the Turkish culture named Yaprak sarma. It is basically pickled grape leafs rolled on some spicy rice. It might sound weird but definitely give it a try.

  • @janpietraszewski759
    @janpietraszewski759 2 роки тому +11

    I love Mantı with a simple tomato/pepper-paste (from the Turkish supermarket) made into a sauce, yogurt and the Paprika butter. It's just more than the sum of its parts. So good!

  • @Vii_DT
    @Vii_DT 2 роки тому +2

    The moment you start grating onions, my eyes start tearing. The effect is that strong.

  • @Abequs
    @Abequs 2 роки тому +11

    Small tip: Bake in oven until light brown bottom before boil. And a key ingredient for toppping, garlic jogurt, dried mint and sumack!

  • @mynameisandong
    @mynameisandong  2 роки тому +20

    Which other country's dumpling should I try? Ramadan Mubarak ❤ Thank you Bokksu for sponsoring this video! Use my code ANDONG15 at partner.bokksu.com/mynameisandong to get $15 off your first Bokksu order!

    • @alexanderfo3886
      @alexanderfo3886 2 роки тому +1

      Maybe Pelmeni?

    • @Leah-tu1oo
      @Leah-tu1oo 2 роки тому +5

      Khinkali😍

    • @theGirlMachine666
      @theGirlMachine666 2 роки тому

      Maybe the big manti, chanum, etc 🤤🤤🤤

    • @guzelmarmara
      @guzelmarmara 2 роки тому +2

      Khinkali is the king of all dumplings for sure but since you also value vegetarian versions most dishes I recommend "mataz", a Circassian dish. Stuffed with a mix of walnuts, crushed coriander seeds, caramelized onions and aleppo flakes. Served with garlic butter, no yoghurt. The dough is same with mantı.

    • @sophiaro4593
      @sophiaro4593 2 роки тому +2

      I still feel there should be a video about Maultaschen. Maybe doing something fusion kitchen-y with them because they are just...the best 😁

  • @ibec69
    @ibec69 2 роки тому +25

    Great inclusion of mantı in your repertoire Andong. I'd suggest what most other Turks have said, a little garlic in the yoghurt does a lot for your appetite and I'd use dried mint and Aleppo pepper in the sauce. An interesting note is mantı, mandu, manju all refer to similar things across different cultures.

  • @matnovak
    @matnovak 2 роки тому +24

    Poles do them slightly bigger and call them "uszka" (pronounced "oosh-kah"). We put these into red borscht and it's absolutely amazing

  • @panuntukan
    @panuntukan 2 роки тому +2

    Traditionaly the melted butter with chili has also dried mint inside. The yoghurt is mixed with squashed garlic and let for resting a couple of hours, better if half a day, then left at room temperature. When served, they add a small amount of dried mint and sumac (it gives a great small amount of acidity). If manti are cooked in a light broth (like italian tortellini), they will let a slight amount of it in the plate. The tiniest the manti are, the better they are. Ideally, with a spoon you should be able to get at least 3 or 4 units. These mini-raviolis are one of the meals you should absolutely try in Turkey, they are so delicious ! They are like the "noble" (very tiny, much longer to make) version of the mantis you have in Uzbek, Tadjik, Kazakh traditions. It is a cultural bridge between chinese and italian ravioli, all along the Silk Road.

  • @andrewfarrell6120
    @andrewfarrell6120 2 роки тому +4

    Dumplings. They show up in every cuisine in some form, sometimes many forms. This is because they are the perfect food delivery system. Pierogi, samosa, potstickers, wontons, empanadas, Cornish pasties. gnocchi, ravioli, manti ... all different takes on the same basic and beautiful idea. So tasty.

  • @mmalik5531
    @mmalik5531 2 роки тому +1

    In a village near Izmir they make manti in bone broth preferably beef. And they also add boiled chickpeas with the manti. Plenty of garlic in the yogurt and chilli butter on top.
    Try it. It’ll be a game changer. You’ll never have regular manti again!!
    Cheers!

  • @sinantuna2859
    @sinantuna2859 2 роки тому +6

    Dried mint and sumac on top is also very common and recommended, along with garlic in the yogurt.

  • @MillhouseSpeaks
    @MillhouseSpeaks 2 роки тому +4

    Ramadhān Mubarak

  • @MrFatijon
    @MrFatijon 2 роки тому +2

    turkish moms are crying after seeing the size of that manti😂
    they look amazing btw dont get me wrong man A+ for effort

  • @VladimirGorev
    @VladimirGorev 2 роки тому +16

    Мой вариант соуса: сметана, соевый (немного, по-вкусу), сычуаньское острое масло.
    I use a different sauce: sour cream (or plain yogurt), soy sauce (a little bit, to taste), Sichuan chili oil.

  • @incicetin1987
    @incicetin1987 2 роки тому +3

    Aaaaaaa, this is perfect, you are my favourite food creator and as a Turkish person seeing you make Turkish food is so precious! I might not even watch this video now and save this happiness for another time. Jk, but this is so cool, thank you!

  • @fionnanomahony8283
    @fionnanomahony8283 2 роки тому +1

    Love you Andong, your videos are amazing

  • @DevranUenal
    @DevranUenal 2 роки тому +6

    I speak a bit of Turkish and I can't help myself but laugh, when I hear "BOK SU" (bokksu) 😂
    But no matter what: I love your videos Andong!

    • @slayjay77
      @slayjay77 2 роки тому +4

      Boksu=Shit water in Turkish 🤣🤣🤣

  • @mammutgamer
    @mammutgamer 2 роки тому +4

    was geht bruder! Fun fact: If you want to impress a turk with manti, then you gotta make them as small as possible. The bigger the manti, the more you are prone to be jokingly called a lazy cook.

    • @kuroneko3585
      @kuroneko3585 2 роки тому

      True. There is even a soup called ''yuvalama'' in Turkey and the more you can fit in a spoon the better you are.

  • @mariAAAAAA_r
    @mariAAAAAA_r 2 роки тому

    My family and I make capeletti just like this!! Sure, it's a ton of work, but if the reward is a rich meat and bone marrow soup with lots of veggies and the tiny delicious dumplings?? Sooo worth it!!
    It's not the traditional way, it doesn't come close to that, but it's a custom started by my immigrants great-grandparents. I'm grateful to have happy memories doing it.

  • @LekxianMagician
    @LekxianMagician 2 роки тому +1

    this is my ABSOLUTE FAVORITE way to eat dumplings! so delicious!

  • @Tuzganaq
    @Tuzganaq 9 місяців тому

    5:14 - 5:21 OMG, I think I just died there!! 😂😂😂
    As a Tatar (who also is part Crimean Tatar and part Uzbek), I grew up eating lots of mantı. My family often cooked it and today, as a 30-year-old, I make them myself quite often. While Turkish mantı are quite small in size, Tatar mantı has the size of an elder child's fist (and it's more round in its' shape). And we serve the dumplings in a circle on a plate, surrounding a small bowl of yoghurt sauce. Nevertheless, Turkish mantı is also delicious. So thank you so much for popularising this Turkic dish! Bik zur räxmät!
    🙏🥟

  • @webboy998
    @webboy998 2 роки тому +5

    It's all connected: Manti, Manty has got the same origin as Japanese Gyoza, Korean Mandu, Nepali Momo, Mongolian Buuza, Russian Pelmeni, Georgian Khinkali, as well as Azerbaijani Gürze
    which correspond to the Chinese Mantou (馒头), Jiaozi(饺子), Momo(馍馍), Baozi(包子).
    Hear me out, let me tell you why all these dishes may very likely have a Chinese origin.
    First, Chinese has got the oldest written record of all these words, Both Jiaozi and Mantou are recorded in the 3rd Century, Baozi is recorded in the 10th Century.
    Name of Manti, Mandu all came around in the 13th Century, and what's the most prominent historical events in the 13th Century? It's the Mongolian Conquest! But you may ask, why isn't all this of Mongolian origin, since Mongols were the conqueror after all. A very important point however is that Mongols were nomads, they didn't cultivate wheat. Also Mongols didn't manage to conquer Japan, that's why Japan didn't adopt Mandu/Manti, the Japanese Gyoza is directly linked to the Japanese settler/colonizer in Manchuria since 1930s. Bringing Jiaozi back to Japan after WW2.
    We know for sure that Chinese soldiers/siege experts played some pivotal roles within the Mongol army. The cooking of such wheat flour based minced meat dish is realistically speaking a "fast food" of its time and can be made with simplest ingredients. The Mongols might have conquered all the territories, somehow the food has remained and became each nations' own variant.
    here is a simple graph I made for the reference:
    twitter.com/Webboy998/status/1507074697699209228/photo/1

    • @TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight
      @TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight 2 роки тому +1

      Thank you so much for sharing the diagram! It provides interesting insight on the nature of meat dumplings. In fact, I myself tend to get bored eating the same things, so sometimes I research how other cultures do their spin on the same principles. I will definitely check out the others so I can cook them myself 😃

    • @RevShifty
      @RevShifty 2 роки тому +2

      You follow Beau? I seem to find fans of his everywhere, often while looking at topics far removed from what he involves himself with. Neat.
      Edit: Also, thanks for the chart and all the new dumpling recipes I suddenly have to try out. I just assumed they came from China because they've been around so damned long and have their own rich history of trade and exploration, but I know comparatively very little bout that region of Europe or its food and never gave the Mongol conquests much thought as it relates to food. But that's a fascinating and delicious avenue for me to research and explore (and cook from) more, so thanks.

    • @webboy998
      @webboy998 2 роки тому +1

      @@RevShifty I assume you just saw my Twitter page, yes Beau of the Fifth Column is an incredibly based human being, but I digress.
      One can also argue this dish being of Turkic/Mesopotamian origin, since wheat is cultivated in that area first. However China really has got the earliest written word of that specific word. What I also have observed is this dish being a dish of celebration or gathering across the cultures. It is a somewhat tedious preparation process after all, it's repetitive and it's better and faster if one can make this dish with an entire family.

    • @Anton-yx5fi
      @Anton-yx5fi 2 роки тому +2

      That's a great writeup and the diagram is really nice too. Fascinating to see how a dish became so different depending on the culture.

    • @wargreysama
      @wargreysama Рік тому

      @@webboy998 You should also consider, "mantı" had many different ways of spelling in each appearance in China, that goes to show, it's not a Chinese word but a loanword, along with the fact that all the Turkic tribes having their own version of "mantı", as well as there are records of manti being carried around by Turks and Mongols on horseback as early as the Huns of Central Asia goes to show that food is Turkic/Mongolic of origin. Its name still stands, but meaning is lost in history. Maybe some day we can find out.

  • @teddycoala2521
    @teddycoala2521 2 роки тому +1

    Wow^^ they look so delicious Andong^^ Great work^^

  • @kikimatthes2866
    @kikimatthes2866 2 роки тому +2

    I love mantı. Obviously there are several dozens of varieties between the Bosphorus and the Altai mountains, which is wonderful, I need to explore that. I boil the small mantı (which are hand made by an elderly couple and sold deep frozen at a grocery store) in salted water and a spoonful or three of tomato paste. For the sauce I fry tomato paste and paprika paste in oil, season it with nane and paprika powder. I pour half of the cooking water into a bowl and add the tomato paprika sauce to the mantı pot; it thickens up a bit. I usually add some of the left over cooking water to get a kind of broth, not too thin, not too thick; quite frankly, I usually end up adding almost all the cooking water back into the pot, because I love this brothy mixture. And finally I top my massive amount of mantı with a very generous dollop of very garlicky garlic yogurt (fresh garlic is key), finishing it off with more dried nane and hot pul biber. I make enough mantı so that there are leftovers, which we can enjoy later on.

  • @kintsugiwarrior
    @kintsugiwarrior 2 роки тому +1

    Andon is uploading a video.
    ME: Yeeeeesssss. QUALITYYYYYY 👍

  • @Graham567
    @Graham567 2 роки тому +1

    Every family has their own sauce recipe but my mother uses smoked paprika, black pepper and hefty amount of dried mint. For the yogurt, we usually use garlic. It is a wholesome dish no matter how you do it though, so there is that :)

    • @turinho
      @turinho 2 роки тому +2

      We make it with salça and bit of dried mint

  • @Sh4dowM4rsh4L
    @Sh4dowM4rsh4L 2 роки тому +1

    you should totally try the kind of Manti that is made in Kazakhstan, they are much bigger and not boiled but steamed

  • @joshuanixon1680
    @joshuanixon1680 Рік тому

    omg just made these and they were so fire

  • @SA-np5yy
    @SA-np5yy 2 роки тому +7

    You gotta try/make çıtır mantı meaning crunchy mantı. It's deep fried as opposed to being boiled and is possibly better than the normal kind.

    • @accaplc
      @accaplc 2 роки тому +1

      Was about to suggest this as well, fried version is the next level.

    • @Human-san
      @Human-san 2 роки тому +1

      Everything is better fried 😌

  • @FancyBurrito47
    @FancyBurrito47 2 роки тому +2

    Looks delicious, thanks for sharing :)

  • @swampmaster330
    @swampmaster330 2 роки тому +1

    2 by 5 by 2 by 5 cm...Andong cooking in the 4th dimension

  • @yannsaint-germain4527
    @yannsaint-germain4527 2 роки тому +2

    I'm really glad I have watched this video, for I now know about some delicious melted butter recipe (6:32). Thanks Andong!

  • @thatgirlfromapartment82
    @thatgirlfromapartment82 2 роки тому +1

    I love how you aprriciate turkish cuisine!!! 😊

  • @umutkaraduman7415
    @umutkaraduman7415 2 роки тому +3

    Nice video. There are different variations as well. One which is less drained and has some of the juicy cooking water in it or the crispy version from the oven.

  • @cem6382
    @cem6382 2 роки тому

    he just said "çok güzel" at 6:49 didnt he lol, very proud

  • @monchatsplash
    @monchatsplash 2 роки тому

    Omg yay finally something on mantı

  • @ZAPIZOOLIO
    @ZAPIZOOLIO 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks for the recipe.

  • @Bearded-Foodie
    @Bearded-Foodie 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks for the paprika butter, just made some kofta, Lebanese rice and flat bread, tried the paprika sauce to go with it but added some sumac as well, it will 100% become a staple!

  • @KitsuneHB
    @KitsuneHB 2 роки тому +2

    I once tried Manti at home but with some store-bought Manti. Mea culpa. ;) The recipe also reminds me of Yogurtlu Eriste - perfect if you are afraid of making dumplings. It's nearly the same but with some short pasta and you fry the minced meat, put some yoghurt onto it, the delicious paprika butter and sprinkle it with parsley.

  • @thepausebrake5063
    @thepausebrake5063 2 роки тому +2

    My family also adds a handful of them into lentil stew. Adds a nice variation

  • @chaosnightravngaming88
    @chaosnightravngaming88 2 роки тому

    always a joy to see new content. Are you planning on doing more Ma La/Szechuan content again?

  • @osman8390
    @osman8390 2 роки тому +1

    well my friend, by doing these videos you did better work than our culture ministry...

  • @ceci2673
    @ceci2673 Рік тому

    I tried them baked, because it was crunchy…Delicious!

  • @12uullaass12
    @12uullaass12 2 роки тому +7

    Theres also the lazy version my dad sometimes made where you just add tomato paste to the boiling water and serve the water together, topped with yoghurt. We never made the sauce with paprika tho. Always with tomato, pepper paste and butter. Should try that aswell! Love from the Netherlands

    • @ShinyRayquaza
      @ShinyRayquaza 2 роки тому

      That's how we do it as well. Love it

  • @kevinjung6130
    @kevinjung6130 2 роки тому +2

    This looks so delicious! I'm going to see if any of the Turkish places around northeast Philly serve these. Hope your team recovers well!

    • @11shah
      @11shah 2 роки тому

      you wont regret it. its very delicious

  • @sombradude2725
    @sombradude2725 2 роки тому +2

    I can only say it the way my mother does it but her dough is a lot thinner first and foremost also her meat filling has some basil too and the sauces she puts on top are just a mix of tomato paste and oil, and a yoghurt sauce just based on yoghurt, garlic, salt and mint

  • @bered4894
    @bered4894 2 роки тому

    dude a few days ago I googled if any famous youtuber made a video about manti but no.. manti/ mantu/ mandu/ wonton/ gyoza/ momo etc. are all coming from Turkish nomads in central asia as well as yoghurt I think. The cultures might differ a lot but at the end of the day we all love dumplings no matter what shape or taste and when it comes down to food we all enjoy it

  • @michaelmcnally1242
    @michaelmcnally1242 2 роки тому +3

    We had some of these from a place in Munich in 2019 and they were mind blowing. I don't know if it was a good place or a bad place, but to us it was amazing.

    • @busraf8945
      @busraf8945 2 роки тому +1

      do you mean Lezizel manti? i was there too back in 2019!

  • @DocFumachu
    @DocFumachu 2 роки тому

    I will try the onion grating methode for my next batch of Bouletten. And definitly will try Manti!
    Also, "Gute Besserung" to the rest of the team. Hope everyone came through without any side effects.

  • @emre05x
    @emre05x 2 роки тому +1

    chilli flakes (pul biber), not paprika powder. butter and olive oil mixed. yoghurt needs garlic, mix it then let it rest overnight in the fridge. 2-3 cloves should be enough. the meat doesn't need garlic added as it comes with the yoghurt. and use mint instead of parsley.

  • @TheBLGL
    @TheBLGL 2 роки тому +1

    Mantı is small in Turkey but not always in other countries. Even in Turkey you can get Uzbeki mantı, which is much bigger.

  • @ivancertic5197
    @ivancertic5197 2 роки тому

    In Serbia we put all manti balls in casserole stile dish, and bake them, in similar way as burek.

  • @GeorgCarlson
    @GeorgCarlson 2 роки тому +1

    Ottoman cuisine, I believe. I had that in Istanbul a couple of times, delicious indeed

  • @benb405
    @benb405 2 роки тому

    Andong, I tried making Manti years ago and completely botched it! Can't wait to try again with a proper tutorial 😎 Thanks!

  • @TheDanil044
    @TheDanil044 2 роки тому +20

    As a Russian I was confused for a second because Manti are big dumplings the are steamed and these look like small Pelemeni to me. But that sauce I will definitely try with Pelemeni because it looks so good.

    • @chelarestelar
      @chelarestelar 2 роки тому +2

      Same. Also, the ones I know have other stuff in the filling, such as potato cubes and probably butter. I remember biting one and a huge burst of buttery sauce coming out

    • @Lilzycho
      @Lilzycho 2 роки тому +1

      my aunt makes them as you described. anyway i bet both variants are delicous.

    • @beng2620
      @beng2620 2 роки тому +3

      In Turkey, mantı is just like in the video traditionally. But I guess there are different versions of mantı around Russia

    • @yusufardayldrm9213
      @yusufardayldrm9213 2 роки тому

      Thays Özebek mantı it big and steamed.

    • @yusufardayldrm9213
      @yusufardayldrm9213 2 роки тому

      @@beng2620 özbek mantısı bu knk.

  • @leponpon6935
    @leponpon6935 2 роки тому

    Star Bokksu!!! Love it~~~

  • @tugbatas8330
    @tugbatas8330 2 роки тому

    I love Mantı🥰

  • @alparslanesmer4251
    @alparslanesmer4251 2 роки тому

    Filling is the most time consuming part of manti. It is why many of us prefer to buy it half-done. There are manti places in Turkey, where you can buy precooked manti, ready to boil. It's easier. In the city of Kayseri, they make manti soup where manti pieces are so small, you can fit 20 to 30 pieces of manti on a single tablespoon.

    • @turinho
      @turinho 2 роки тому +1

      *tahta kaşığın üstüne
      Bizim millet niye hep böyle abartıyor ya. Yemek kaşığın üstüne 20-30 tane mantı nasıl sığacak gözünü seveyim. Hem şimdiye kadar hiç görmedim.

  • @MlleFunambuline
    @MlleFunambuline 2 роки тому

    I'm lucky to have a turkish food store in my street and they have dry mantis and the perfect recipe for the sauces. It became my comfort food at the first bite

  • @theGamer93
    @theGamer93 2 роки тому +3

    My family is Turkish and manti is really the number one choice if we go to the restaurant (after kebab / köfte). But did you just use Porkmeat? 😂

  • @codebus
    @codebus 2 роки тому

    As a Turkey Gerky (half German / Turkish) I was on Büyükada an Island off the coast of Istanbul. A Restaurant had an English menu, and in Turkish mantık is logic. And mantı is the ravioli. But they google translated it to logi. Also there is a difference between i and ı.

  • @ian3486
    @ian3486 2 роки тому

    im sure they have an awesome personality

  • @quaxBK
    @quaxBK 2 роки тому +1

    Would love if you made a video on Uzbek Manti, which are a totally different beast (huge, bigger than pelmeni and steamed). They have a decent variety of fillings too, one of my favorites being pumpkin

  • @FurkanCemTurfanda
    @FurkanCemTurfanda 2 роки тому

    I like baking the Manti first, then boiling it in tomato sauce. It makes it crunchy. Also, I recommend sprinkling sumac on the yogurt.

  • @Emresinho
    @Emresinho 2 роки тому +1

    More Turkish food please! 🤩

  • @ersu.t
    @ersu.t Рік тому

    instead of paprika, we use capsicum paste or even just plain tomato paste. Also we bake ours in the oven for 10mins so we can freeze them and have them later. Once baked you don't have to be as careful when boiling them.

  • @Start.a.curvolution
    @Start.a.curvolution 2 роки тому +1

    Love it💯💯💯💯

  • @namanpreetkaur3518
    @namanpreetkaur3518 2 роки тому

    Please share more of Turkish cuisines and recipes

  • @kiwanoh7798
    @kiwanoh7798 2 роки тому +2

    In the Balkans we call them Mantije (Mantiye), though the difference is make them like a pie, we get them rounded, put them together in a oven pan and bake them.

  • @MrVovansim
    @MrVovansim 2 роки тому

    Aww, these are the tiniest dumplings. My grandma makes dumplings so big, you can barely pick one up with a soup spoon, haha!

  • @MrKirby365
    @MrKirby365 2 роки тому

    Yum!

  • @adammoore7447
    @adammoore7447 2 роки тому

    While not traditional, something tells me I should try frying these...you can't go wrong with fried dough🙃

  • @enesbaha8631
    @enesbaha8631 2 роки тому

    You can also try this Kayseri style, with smaller pieces of mantı swimming in a runny tomato sauce almost like soup.

  • @4elove4ishee
    @4elove4ishee 2 роки тому +5

    Huh, manti I know (from Turkmenistan) are super different - huge and steamed

    • @sumokaru
      @sumokaru 2 роки тому +1

      in turkey they are really small

    • @TheBLGL
      @TheBLGL 2 роки тому

      Those are my favorite mantı, I call them Uzbeki cause I used to eat them at an Uzbeki restaurant near my apartment in Istanbul, but same thing. Soooooo good. 😋

  • @Zarkovision
    @Zarkovision 2 роки тому +1

    I love manti. But I never dared to make them myself, I always bought the frozen manti in a supermarket. In German supermarkets the brand "Dovgan" is very good.

  • @suss466
    @suss466 2 роки тому

    bayılırım mantıya

  • @sethzard
    @sethzard 2 роки тому

    There was a place that did Manti where I fell in love with them. That being said, I find making individual things way more work than it's worth.

  • @noliverk
    @noliverk 2 роки тому

    Get well soon, crew.

  • @duwalagepasinduchamodyagun7552
    @duwalagepasinduchamodyagun7552 2 роки тому

    One clove of garlic one clove. In all my days I have not heard such heresy

  • @crajabli
    @crajabli 2 роки тому

    We have same kind of dish here in Azerbaijan which we call mantı too and we have smaller version of it called düşbərə which tastes amazing btw

  • @totalmadnesman
    @totalmadnesman Рік тому

    My man, where did you get these awesome neon lights from??

  • @aac_editz3840
    @aac_editz3840 2 роки тому +1

    I am turkish and manti comes from kayseri in turkey and i come from kayseri

  • @dawnpatrol13
    @dawnpatrol13 2 роки тому +4

    By chance I just ate mantı for the first time last night. I hear that a tomato-based sauce is common, but the restaurant I got them from did them almost exactly the same as you.

    • @TheBLGL
      @TheBLGL 2 роки тому

      I’ve never had or seen mantı in Turkey with a tomato based sauce. Always garlic yogurt, red pepper & butter, dried mint.
      Edited for spelling

    • @dawnpatrol13
      @dawnpatrol13 2 роки тому +1

      @@TheBLGL Look on youtube for recipes for mantı (by Turkish people). Some people make the non-yogurt component just with butter+paprika. Some with butter+tomato paste+pepper paste. Obviously you're in a better position to say that the former is more common, but the latter definitely exists and has been made by some Turkish people, for what it's worth.

    • @wargreysama
      @wargreysama Рік тому

      @@dawnpatrol13 they are doing it WRONG :D Mantı should be strictly eaten with chilli flakes fried in butter with a little bit tomato paste added for that extra thicness and spiciness and then eaten with yoğurt (garlic is optional, quite welcome but optional). FROM SOMEONE WHO LOVES MANTI (It's my second most favorite dish in the world (first is a soup called KESMEAŞI (green lentil soup with small homemade flat noodles and fried doughs and some spice)

  • @berkayorhaner4063
    @berkayorhaner4063 2 роки тому

    Çok güzel! =)

  • @saadat_ic
    @saadat_ic 2 роки тому

    If one adds starch to the rolling dough, then it would not stick. The same goes with extra flour.
    Usually one adds flour to avoid it from the sticking on the surface, but not before cooking. In this kind of situation they will stick to each other on the plate.

  • @__koaaa_9619
    @__koaaa_9619 2 роки тому +1

    6:00 Wetting the edges might help the edges closing up.

  • @MadScientistGuild
    @MadScientistGuild 2 роки тому

    Hope they get well!

  • @kzteligo
    @kzteligo 2 роки тому

    In Kazakhstan, we have big manti and in most central Asian countries

  • @berdansargol1577
    @berdansargol1577 Рік тому

    For the onion water you've extracted: Use it for a gemüse kebab marinade, you won't regret it.

  • @Selenophile.
    @Selenophile. 2 роки тому

    I loooove ir

  • @timb2292
    @timb2292 7 місяців тому

    Few Tipps to make it better:
    No garlic in the filling - nor Cumin, but Parsley!
    No corn starch
    Yogurt with crushed garlic is a must
    Brown the butter thoroughly
    Make another sauce made of slightly fried pepper paste - Biber Salçası and dried mint.
    Use enough Water to cook the manti.
    Then you’ll get the real divine experience we all know and love so much. Have fun.