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What is Rakı?
It's said that you never forget where, when, and with whom you sipped your first glass of rakı -- Turkey's alcoholic beverage of tradition and choice. Its anise aroma and flavor are reminiscent of French cafes along the Champs Élysées where Pernod, Ricard and Pastis still flow -- but its history is a good deal older. The Turkish name for it derives from the Arabic 'arak' which means 'sweat' or 'sweating'. But according to knowledgeable sources, it first came from East India where they'd produce it by distilling sugarcane sap mixed with rice yeast. The same sources say that dried grapes and dates were used to produce it in Iran. In Turkey it was originally made from barley and corn. There, the name evolved over time from 'arak' to aroka, ariki, araki, arakı, and irakı -- until it was finally shortened to rakı.
Rakı etiquette
For 'true' rakı drinkers (male or female), there is something ritualistic in the way they take their drink (which may be found in restaurants, bars, and cafes -- not to mention markets -- throughout Turkey at almost any hour of the day or night). Firstly, it should be cooled in its bottle to 8-10 degrees centigrade before it's served. And it must always be 'sipped' from a straight cylindrical drinking glass (about 120 ml high and 55 ml wide) -- never 'knocked back' from a shot glass. But, it doesn't have to be taken sek (neat) at all. According to preference, it may be taken with mineral or soda water added (or on the side) -- with or without ice. And when mixed with any of these, the normally pure clear rakı turns milky white in color (see photo above). Warning ... Once a 'true' rakı drinker has established the preferred formulaic way he takes his poison, don't ask him to change it. You may as well ask him to change the way he writes his signature -- as many a chastened apprentice waiter has learned!
What goes with Rakı, and when?
To soften the effect of this strong alcoholic drink, it is most often consumed (between main meals) together with cold Turkish 'mezeler' such as: Russian salad, tarator, tomato 'söğüüs' salad, tongue, sigara böreği , cacık, sheep's brain, shrimp, mussels, pilaki, etc. And, it goes extremely well with fruits -- perhaps the best known of all rakı 'mezeler' combines fresh melon and Turkish white cheese. During full main meals, it is most often drunk when the main course is fish.
How is it produced in Turkey today?
These days, rakı is produced from fresh summer grapes or from rich, well preserved dried grapes -- to which is added, at just the right time, the distinctive anise flavoring. The grapes are fed through an automatic chopping machine where they are diced, mashed, and shredded -- and mixed with water. The resulting pulp and sugar water mixture, called 'mayse', is sterilized with steam -- after which it passes to the fermentation process. Soon thereafter the anise flavoring is added and the mixture is heated again, and then cooled -- which launches a very slow distillation process. The first 35 hours of distilled product goes unused -- rakı is obtained only from product distilled between 35 and 40 hours (when the rakı, at that stage, is between 78 and 80 percent alcohol). Later, during a process called 'sondurme', water is added to reduce the alcohol proportion. Still later during 'sondurme', sugar is added -- 4 to 6 grams per liter, depending on the taste of the rakı one wishes to produce. The end product, which is between 45 and 50 percent alcohol, is allowed to rest in oaken barrels for 60-75 days. It is then bottled and sent to market.
Also:
Aslan (Arslan) Sütü
The 'Lion's Milk' of Turkey
World Food -- Turkey
Lonely Planet
ISBN 1-86450-027-1
Those requiring
additional facts about alcoholism, alcoholic treatments, and alcohol recovery programs
please visit the Research Society on Alcoholism or
Alcoholics Anonymous websites at the addresses provided above...

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© Learn Turkish of the People! -- Alcohol information about Rakı in Turkey