Tavuk Güveç: the story on the plate
Güveç refers to both the clay pot and the style of slow, gentle cooking that makes vegetables sweet and meat tender.
Historical background
Güveç refers to both the clay pot and the style of slow, gentle cooking that makes vegetables sweet and meat tender.
Why it is famous
Tavuk Güveç is included because it adds a recognisable but still specific part of Turkish food culture, helping the country collection feel broader than only generic kebabs and baklava.
Cultural significance
Turkish cooking sits between Anatolia, the Ottoman court, Istanbul street food, the Black Sea, the Aegean and neighbouring food traditions. It values bread, grains, yoghurt, herbs, lamb, fish, vegetables, rice, pastry and carefully balanced sweets.




