The Central and Southern Aegean Coast Restaurants

Dining out along the Aegean coast is a pleasure, especially if you enjoy seafood and fresh produce. There are countless seafood restaurants at all price ranges. A typical meal includes an assortment of hot and cold meze (appetizers), a mixed salad, and the catch of the day, capped off with a Turkish dessert. To make it authentic, accompany your meal with rak? (a spirit similar in taste to oúzo). Some of the more common fish you'll find along the Aegean coast are levrek (sea bass), çipura (sea bream), barbunya (red mullet), and lahos (grouper), as well as tasty smaller fish like sardalya (sardines). Note that most fish restaurants charge per kilogram for whole fish, and the prices often aren't listed; ask before ordering to avoid receiving an unexpectedly large bill at the end of an otherwise pleasant meal. Of course, there are plenty of meat and kebab restaurants around, too, if that’s what you’re craving.

For dessert, try local dondurma (Turkish ice cream, often thickened with orchid root or mastic resin), as well as milk puddings and baklava. It’s often better to avoid hotel restaurants at lunch and dinner—you can frequently find better and less expensive food a short walk away—but luxury and boutique hotels might be an exception as they are often firm favorites on the local restaurant scene. And don’t forget street snacks! In season, you can grab fat local Smyrna figs; a cup of icy, dark berry ?erbet (think of it as Ottoman Gatorade); or a sesame-studded feta-and-tomato sandwich, each for less than a dollar in central ?zmir. Simit, the classic Turkish bagel-like street snack, is called gevrek in the ?zmir region, and often purchased along with a piece of tulum peyniri (goat's milk cheese) and a hard-boiled egg, following an old Sephardic culinary custom.

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  • 1. Aquarium

    $$$

    At this waterfront restaurant, you should begin your meal with a selection of meze, like stuffed zucchini flowers, roasted eggplant with tulum cheese, and octopus salad. Then you can let the owner, Cengiz Bey, help you select the best local fish for the grill. Whatever you choose, don't skip dessert: Gaziantep baklava or irmik helvası (traditional warm semolina halvah) served with ice cream.

    Yalı Mevkii 54, Gümüslük, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
    252-394–3682

    Known For

    • Spectacular meze
    • Aquarium special (shrimp and octopus cooked with garlic, butter, and flame-roasted peppers and eggplant)
    • Delicious desserts

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 2. Arşipel Restaurant

    $$

    Summer and winter, the dining room at the Kırkınca Houses Boutique Hotel is the best in town, overlooking the lovely landscape and serving delicious and authentic dishes prepared with oil produced from olives harvested in the garden. You can accompany your meal with wines produced in Şirince, and the sound of mellow live music on Friday and Saturday nights. Among the delicacies on the menu are creamy eggplant soup; şevketi bostanı, a root vegetable cooked with tender pieces of lamb; and delicious homemade pasta, erişte, served in a light cream and almond sauce.

    Şirince Köyü, Sirince, Izmir, 35920, Turkey
    232-898–3133

    Known For

    • Lovely atmosphere
    • Local wines
    • Erişte (homemade pasta, served in a light cream and almond sauce)
  • 3. Ejder Restaurant

    $$

    This popular spot overlooking the Selçuk aqueduct is run by a friendly family team—husband, wife, and son—and offers a menu that includes such traditional vegetarian dishes as exemplary stuffed peppers and fried eggplant. It may sometimes take a while for the generous, juicy lamb and chicken kebabs to cook in the small hearth, but it's worth the wait.

    Cengiz Topel Cad. 9/E, Selçuk, Izmir, 35920, Turkey
    232-892–3296

    Known For

    • Good veggie options
    • Pirzola (lamb chops)
    • Kuzu beyti (lamb rolls)
  • 4. Alaçatı Tatlıcısı İmren

    $

    This local favorite is the place to come for dessert; in addition to black forest cake and semolina cake, there's ice cream in many different flavors, served in a homemade waffle cone. Sakızlı muhallebi, a local specialty, is Turkish milk pudding flavored with gum mastic, the aromatic resin of the mastic tree. A beloved local brand, İmren has opened a casual Turkish restaurant on the same street (Kemalpaşa Cad. 70), as well as an Alaçatı hotel.

    Kemalpaşa Cad. 65 and 72, Alaçati, Izmir, 35000, Turkey
    232-716–8356

    Known For

    • Variety of delicious cakes
    • Mastic cookies
    • There's also an İmren restaurant on the same street (Kemalpaşa Cad. 70)

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch or dinner
  • 5. Asmaaltı Cafe

    $

    This charming outdoor café and restaurant is just a five-minute walk from the Priene ruins and features a shaded, leafy atmosphere with gazebos and picnic tables. The menu consists of classic Turkish staples and the speciality is gözleme: savory crepes stuffed with either potato, spinach, or cheese. 

    Kahramanlar Caddesi, Güllübahçe, Aydin, Turkey

    Known For

    • Charming outdoor setting
    • Gözleme (savory crepes)
    • Grilled meatballs and kebabs
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  • 6. Avrasya Lokantası

    $$

    Hearty traditional Turkish soups, stews, and meat and vegetable dishes are arrayed buffet-style at this cheery lokanta, which is always bustling at lunchtime. At the top of Alaçatı village near the minibus stop, it offers a reasonably priced and reliable alternative to the increasingly expensive fare found farther into town.

    Uğur Mumcu Cad. 22, Alaçati, Izmir, Turkey
    232-716–9144

    Known For

    • Meatballs with pureed potato
    • Mücver (zucchini fritters) with homemade yogurt
    • Lamb and golden thistle stew
  • 7. Bitez Dondurma

    $

    Bitez Dondurma's creamy ice-cream concoctions full of fresh fruit have proved so popular that the shop now has branches all over the Bodrum Peninsula, and as far away as Istanbul. The waterfront location in Bodrum's town center is a convenient spot to grab a scoop or two as you stroll along the promenade.

    Neyzen Teyfik Cad. 76, Bodrum, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
    252-313–3629

    Known For

    • Mandalina (mandarin) ice cream
    • Balbadem (honey and almond) ice cream
    • Nar (pomegranate) ice cream

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch or dinner
  • 8. Dost Pide & Pizza

    $$

    Stopping here for pide (Turkish-style pizza or calzones, piled with a variety of ingredients that can include cheese, spinach, meat, or egg) is a highlight of a trip to Ilıca and a great choice for a quick lunch, or even breakfast, though on the pricey side compared to similar fare elsewhere. The menu also includes kebabs, soup, pizza, and traditional Turkish desserts.

    5152 Sok. 27, Ilica, Izmir, 35930, Turkey
    232-723–2059

    Known For

    • Kıymalı (mincemeat) pide
    • Good breakfast stop
    • Open 24 hours in peak season
  • 9. Hoca'nın Yeri

    $

    The specialty of the house at this simple eatery on the boardwalk in Türkbükü is large, rather greasy portions of çiğ böreği, a Crimean dish brought to Turkey that consists of flat, fried pastry stuffed with ground beef, onion, and spices. One of the few unpretentious (and relatively inexpensive) places left on the Türkbükü shoreline, this place has a beach-hut vibe, its own little patch of sand, and a family clientele.

    Liman Cad. 77, Göltürkbükü, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
    252-377–5907

    Known For

    • Baked or fried mantı (tiny Turkish "ravioli," stuffed with minced meat)
    • Gözleme (Turkish savory crepes with various fillings)
    • Turkish breakfast

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Oct.–Apr., Credit cards accepted
  • 10. Kavaklı Köfteci

    $$

    Köfte (Turkish-style meatballs) are the mainstay of this popular, no-frills eatery, and you can enjoy them as a sandwich or with a side of piyaz (navy bean salad, with or without onions), homemade bread, and ayran (salted yogurt drink). The only other dish on the menu is çöp şiş, small pieces of skewered grilled lamb. No alcohol served.

    Merkez Çarşı İçi, Yalikavak, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
    252-385–4748

    Known For

    • Good köfte
    • Simple menu
    • Casual vibe
  • 11. Kayaş Restaurant & Bar

    $$

    This cheery traveler favorite just off Pamukkale’s main square serves up better-than-average grilled meats, güveç (casseroles), and other traditional Turkish dishes (plus international staples like omelets and pasta) on an outdoor patio under a thick canopy of grapevines. Portions are on the small side, but nicely presented. 

    Atatürk Cad. 3, Pamukkale, Denizli, 20280, Turkey
    534-561–1080

    Known For

    • Mixed grill
    • Karnıyarık (stuffed eggplant)
    • Full bar including a good selection of bottled beer
  • 12. Kumrucu Şevki

    $

    Ilıca is known for kumru—Turkish-style panini prepared with special sesame-seed rolls and stuffed with salami, sucuk (beef spicy sausage), cheese, tomatoes, and pickles—and this place serves the best in town. Pair your sandwich with a glass of ayran, a refreshing yogurt drink. There are multiple locations in Ilıca and branches of this popular local chain in Alaçatı and Çeşme as well. It's open 24 hours.

    5066 Sok. 2, Ilica, Izmir, 25700, Turkey
    232-723–2392-Ilıca waterfront branch

    Known For

    • They also do a good Turkish breakfast
    • There are multiple locations
    • The place for kumru
  • 13. Reyhan Patisserie

    $

    With a huge variety of baked goods and desserts, excellent house-made ice cream and chocolates, this pastry shop has been popular for decades. This branch of the legendary patisserie, in the heart of trendy Alsancak, is also a sit-down café serving coffee and Turkish-style breakfast.

    Dr. Mustafa Enver Bey Cad. 24, Izmir, Izmir, 35260, Turkey
    232-422–2802

    Known For

    • Strawberry cheesecake
    • Profiteroles
    • Sütlaç (creamy rice pudding)

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch or dinner
  • 14. Rumeli Pastanesi

    $

    Since 1945, the Rumeli bakery has been the place in Çeşme for treats like sakızlı dondurma (thick, chewy Turkish-style mastic ice cream) in flavors such as karadut (black mulberry) and tarçın (cinnamon), as well as jams, sweet mastic paste, and other traditional goodies. It's on the main shopping street, not far from Ayios Haralambos church.

    İnkilap Cad. 46/A, Çesme, Izmir, 35930, Turkey
    232-712–6759

    Known For

    • Sakızlı muhallebi (mastic-flavored pudding)
    • Balbadem (honey and almond) ice cream
    • Mastic cookies

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch or dinner
  • 15. Selçuk Pidecisi

    $

    Blissfully lacking the touts trying to lure tourists into the restaurants around Cengiz Topel Caddesi, this tiny, friendly pide shop is conveniently located near the Selçuk Museum. In addition to the crisp, tasty pide offerings, there is also a selection of güveç (casserole) dishes on the menu.

    Uğur Mumcu Sevgi Yolu 12/A, Selçuk, Izmir, Turkey
    232-892–1434

    Known For

    • Vegetarian-friendly pide toppings such as spinach and mushrooms
    • Lahmacun (flatbread with spicy minced meat topping)
    • Tahini-topped pide for dessert
  • 16. Şirincem Restaurant

    $$

    Attached to a pansiyon of the same name near the entrance to town, this casual restaurant offers an assortment of grilled meats and home-cooked dishes as well as meze and gözleme (Turkish-style crepes). Meals are served in a pleasantly tree-shaded, plant-filled courtyard decorated with hanging lamps, some made out of dried gourds.

    Şirince Köyü İç Yölü, Sirince, Izmir, 35920, Turkey
    537-831–8297

    Known For

    • Saç kavurma (finely chopped meat and vegetables sautéed on an iron plate)
    • Kuru fasulye (white bean stew)
    • Köy kahvaltısı (village breakfast)
  • 17. Sünger Pizza

    $$

    Italian-inspired pizzas, pastas, and salads are served alongside traditional Turkish chicken and beef dishes. It's always packed with local families and tourists sitting back at wooden tables filled with the enormous portions. Alcohol is served, and not at a ludicrous markup. There's also a branch in Turgutreis.

    Neyzen Tevfik Cad. 160, Bodrum, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
    252-316–0854

    Known For

    • Calzones
    • Breakfast served until 2 pm
    • Large summer terrace
  • 18. Yuvam

    $

    On a small side street in Kuşadası's main bazaar area, "My Nest/Home" truly lives up to its name, offering the kind of food you'd find in a Turkish home. It's open only at lunch, and items can sell out quickly, so get there early to enjoy daily specials such as meatballs in sour sauce, baked chicken with rice, or bamya (okra) in a tomato-olive oil sauce. Alcohol is not served.

    7 Eylül Sok. 4/A, Kusadasi, Aydin, 09435, Turkey
    256-613–3334

    Known For

    • Soups and stews
    • Vegetarian dishes
    • Lunch-only

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No dinner

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