• About
    • Introduction
    • Explore The Other Tour
    • 2026 Itinerary of The Other Tour Istanbul
    • Common Questions Answered
    • The Other Tour Reviews
    • About Us
  • Tour Guide
    • Istanbul
    • Cappadocia
    • Ephesus
    • Mediterranean
  • Daily Tours
    • Istanbul
    • Cappadocia
    • Antalya
    • Izmir
  • Istanbul
    • Attractions
    • Tours
    • Neighborhoods
    • Eat & Drink
    • Stay
    • Shop
  • Turkey
    • Turkey Tours
    • Destinations
    • Istanbul
    • Cappadocia
    • Ephesus
    • Pamukkale
    • Antalya
    • Bodrum
  • Services
    • Private Tours
    • Daily City Tours
    • Made-to-order Travel
    • Hire a tour guide
    • Unique Activities
    • Airport Transfers
    • Hotel Selection
    • Vacation Booking
    • Corporate Group Tours
    • Culinary Tours
    • Event Planning
    • Istanbul Layover Tours
    • Family Time
  • Blog
    • TOP 5 ISTANBUL
    • Events
    • Documentary
    • History
    • News
    • All
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
  • About
    • Introduction
    • Explore The Other Tour
    • 2026 Itinerary of The Other Tour Istanbul
    • Common Questions Answered
    • The Other Tour Reviews
    • About Us
  • Tour Guide
    • Istanbul
    • Cappadocia
    • Ephesus
    • Mediterranean
  • Daily Tours
    • Istanbul
    • Cappadocia
    • Antalya
    • Izmir
  • Istanbul
    • Attractions
    • Tours
    • Neighborhoods
    • Eat & Drink
    • Stay
    • Shop
  • Turkey
    • Turkey Tours
    • Destinations
    • Istanbul
    • Cappadocia
    • Ephesus
    • Pamukkale
    • Antalya
    • Bodrum
  • Services
    • Private Tours
    • Daily City Tours
    • Made-to-order Travel
    • Hire a tour guide
    • Unique Activities
    • Airport Transfers
    • Hotel Selection
    • Vacation Booking
    • Corporate Group Tours
    • Culinary Tours
    • Event Planning
    • Istanbul Layover Tours
    • Family Time
  • Blog
    • TOP 5 ISTANBUL
    • Events
    • Documentary
    • History
    • News
    • All
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result

Pandeli: A Century of Ottoman-Greek Cooking Above the Spice Bazaar

A Century of Ottoman-Greek Cooking Above Istanbul's Loudest Bazaar

Ömer Savaşçı by Ömer Savaşçı
July 4, 2026
in History, Istanbul Food, Istanbul Restaurants, Istanbul Travel Blog, Ottoman Empire, Restaurants, Review, Turkish Food
Reading Time: 15 mins read
A A
0

Pandeli restaurant has stood in Istanbul for over a century, and the kitchen never tried to evoke the city’s Ottoman past. It simply never left it.

Table of Contents

Introduction to Pandeli

The turquoise tiles begin before you reach the door.

You climb a narrow staircase above the entrance of the Egyptian Spice Bazaar in Eminönü, and when the dining room opens above you — arched ceilings, brass chandeliers, walls sheeted in hand-painted blue-green tile from floor to cornice — the bazaar noise below seems to drop away entirely.

This is Pandeli, one of Istanbul’s great old restaurants: part dining room, part living museum, and for generations a dependable stop for politicians, writers, artists, visiting celebrities and ordinary Istanbulites marking an occasion.

Founded by Pandeli Çobanoğlu in the early twentieth century, it became famous for refined Turkish-Ottoman home cooking served with ceremony but without unnecessary fuss. Its classics include hünkar beğendi, lamb dishes, stuffed vegetables, rice pilaf and the restaurant’s celebrated eggplant preparations — comforting, elegant food that feels inseparable from the city around it.

Even visitors who come mainly for the interior soon understand why Pandeli has survived for so long: few restaurants capture Istanbul’s mixture of grandeur, nostalgia and everyday appetite quite so perfectly.

The Rise of a Bazaar Legend

Pandeli Çobanoğlu arrived in Istanbul young — an Anatolian Greek with an entrepreneur’s eye and not much else. Around 1901, he set up a wooden shack in Çukur Han, near the waterfront at Eminönü, selling piyaz and köfte from a simple counter.

Pandeli Çobanoğlu, founder of Pandeli restaurant Istanbul, seated above the restaurant sign in a historic archive photograph

What followed was neither luck nor novelty: the food was exceptionally good, and within years intellectuals, poets, and politicians had made Pandeli’s their regular table — among them Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the poet Ahmed Haşim, and a generation of figures shaping the early Turkish Republic. The restaurant became a meeting ground for the city’s most restless minds.

Word spread through the 1920s and 1930s, and Pandeli outgrew the wooden shack — journalists, diplomats, and businessmen crowded in alongside the poets and statesmen who had already claimed it. In September 1955, riots tore through the neighbourhood and destroyed the original shack; the family salvaged the name and the recipes and kept going.

In 1956, President Celal Bayar and Prime Minister Adnan Menderes granted the Çobanoğlu family a new location by state decree: the second floor above the Egyptian Spice Bazaar gate. The family moved in, laid the tiles, and kept cooking.

That room — and that family — are still there. The third generation of the Çobanoğlu family runs Pandeli today, under head chef Abdullah Sevim. In 2022, the Michelin Guide awarded the restaurant a Bib Gourmand, recognising exceptional food at a price that still feels honest.

The same Michelin organisation stars Istanbul‘s grandest tables — here, it rewards something plainer and harder to fake: a full meal that still costs what it should. On any given weekday, they still know half the room by name — the kind of welcome no reservation app can manufacture.

A Tile Room Above the World

Interior dining room at Pandeli restaurant Istanbul, waiter serving lunch beneath arched tiled walls

The room itself earns the climb. Turquoise-blue İznik-style tile cases every surface — walls, arches, columns — in a mosaic that shifts from cobalt to aquamarine as the afternoon light moves across it. High domed ceilings amplify the quiet.

Brass chandeliers hang low enough to catch that amber light through the windows. Below, the Spice Bazaar churns — the shout of vendors, the heave of the crowd, the smell of saffron and dried chilli rising from the stalls. Up here, it is a different city.

The tables sit close together in the manner of old Istanbul restaurants, the kind where the conversation at the next table becomes part of your meal. Regulars and first-time visitors share the room without friction — on a weekday lunch, the clientele runs from local professionals to a table of Japanese food writers comparing notes.

The maître d’ speaks English without fanfare, the menu arrives in several languages, and the staff navigate a foreign guest with the ease of long practice. Walking in alone, or arriving without a word of Turkish, is entirely comfortable — nobody here is thrown by an outsider.

Most visitors photograph the tile and leave. The ones who sit down long enough to order the hünkar beğendi understand why Atatürk kept coming back.

What the Sultan Would Have Ordered

Guests reviewing the menu at Pandeli restaurant Istanbul, İznik tile dining room

When the hünkar beğendi arrives, the kitchen has braised the lamb shoulder until it dissolves. It sits on a bed of charred eggplant purée still lifting smoke as the plate lands, the char faintly bitter against the sweetness of the lamb.

You understand immediately why this dish has defined the restaurant for over a century — these are Ottoman-Greek recipes sharpened across decades of daily repetition. The dish that arrives today is the same one cooks here have made ten thousand times before.

The eggplant pie is the other house icon: a pastry shell filled with layered aubergine, crowned with a single curling leaf of döner kebab that melts into the filling as it cools. Order both and you have the Pandeli that locals know.

Hünkar beğendi at Pandeli restaurant Istanbul — braised lamb on smoky charred eggplant purée, served with roasted pepper and tomato
The dish that brought Atatürk back to the same table, decade after decade

The menu extends to Kastamonu pastrami with keşkek wheat stew — a northern Anatolian combination that rarely appears on Istanbul menus — and hamsi pilav, pilaf threaded through with Black Sea anchovies, tasting specifically of winter on that coast.

For dessert: kazandibi, caramelised-bottom milk pudding with a scorched crust giving way to a cold, trembling interior, or ayva tatlısı — slow-roasted quince turned amber as it bakes, served under a cloud of clotted buffalo cream.

  • Must Order: Hünkar beğendi and the eggplant pie — the two dishes that define what this kitchen is. Order these before anything else.
  • For Dessert: Kazandibi, the caramelised-bottom milk pudding, over the quince if you can only choose one.
  • Also Worth Trying: Kastamonu pastrami with keşkek, and hamsi pilav — both rare on Istanbul menus, both firmly in this kitchen’s comfort zone.
  • Skip: The grilled meat section. It is fine, but the same food is available anywhere in the city — the Ottoman-Greek core is what this kitchen actually does well.

Left alone, most diners split their order evenly across the whole menu, and half the table ends up eating something forgettable. A guide who knows this kitchen does one thing instead: puts the hünkar beğendi, the eggplant pie, the Kastamonu pastrami, and the hamsi pilav on the table, and steers the order away from everything else.

The Tables That History Kept

Tour guide holding opera glasses inside Pandeli restaurant Istanbul, turquoise İznik tile walls behind

Sit long enough in this room and you feel the weight of who has sat here before you. Atatürk had a regular table. Celal Bayar and Adnan Menderes came after the move.

In later decades: Queen Elizabeth II, Audrey Hepburn, Sean Connery, Robert De Niro, Roman Polanski, Sarah Jessica Parker. The photographs lining the entry corridor tell the story plainly — word of mouth, not tourism, held it together across a hundred years.

Historic black and white photograph of an early Turkish Republic banquet dinner with Atatürk, 1930s

Historic restaurants in Istanbul often trade on heritage while the food grows stale and the tiles crack. Pandeli has done the opposite — the Bib Gourmand nod confirms what regulars have always known: that the kitchen still earns its room.

What survives here is a living record of a cuisine — Ottoman-Greek, multicultural Istanbul — passed down whole, recipe by recipe, for more than a century. The room does most of the work on its own; knowing the full story is what turns the meal into something you carry home.

The tile room above the Spice Bazaar does not ask you to imagine the past — you sit in the actual room, sixty feet above one of the loudest markets in Europe, and the weight of that is slow to arrive, but it does.

Good to Know Before You Go

  • Address: Mısır Çarşısı No.1, Eminönü, Istanbul — second floor above the main gate of the Egyptian Spice Bazaar. Climb the staircase immediately inside the arch to the left as you enter from the Eminönü waterfront side.
  • Hours: Monday to Saturday, lunch service only — typically 11:30 to 16:00. Pandeli does not serve dinner and is closed on Sundays. Arrive by noon for the full menu; the kitchen runs down popular dishes by mid-afternoon.
  • Reservations: Strongly recommended for parties of four or more, and for any Saturday visit. Phone reservation is standard, and the staff speak English. The restaurant accepts walk-ins when tables allow, but the room fills quickly on weekday lunches.

  • Getting There: Eminönü is a five-minute tram ride from Sultanahmet on the T1 line (stop: Eminönü). From Galata or Beyoğlu, cross the Golden Horn by ferry or on foot over the Galata Bridge — the Spice Bazaar entrance sits directly off the bridge ramp. From the Grand Bazaar, it is a twelve-minute walk downhill through the covered bazaar lanes.
  • Price Range: Mid-range by Istanbul standards — a full meal with appetiser, main, and dessert typically falls between ₺400–600 per person. The restaurant accepts cards. The Michelin Bib Gourmand listing reflects value as much as quality: this is not an expense-account restaurant.

What Our Guests Say

Our guide suggested it as an add-on to the Spice Bazaar visit. We almost said no — we thought we'd just get a quick tea and keep moving. Instead we stayed two hours, ordered far too much, and missed our afternoon plans entirely. The lamb dish. The photographs on the walls. The fact that it's been in the same family since the 1950s. I don't usually write reviews but I didn't want anyone to miss this.
Lucia M.Argentina
I almost walked past it — there's no sign you'd notice from the street. We climbed the stairs not entirely sure we'd find a restaurant, and then the tiled room opened up and I genuinely stopped in the doorway. The hünkar beğendi was the best thing I ate in my two weeks in Turkey. Our guide knew the maître d', which probably helped, but the food would have stood on its own regardless. It was definitely one of those lunches you plan your afternoon around.
Luna T.England

FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Pandeli restaurant in Istanbul?

Pandeli is located on the second floor above the main gate of the Egyptian Spice Bazaar (Mısır Çarşısı No.1) in Eminönü. Climb the staircase immediately inside the arch on the left as you enter from the Eminönü waterfront side.

Is Pandeli a Michelin-starred restaurant?

Pandeli holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (awarded 2022), which recognises exceptional food at honest prices. It is not a Michelin-starred restaurant, but the Bib Gourmand designation from the Michelin Guide is a meaningful marker of quality and value.

What should I order at Pandeli?

The two house icons are the hünkar beğendi (braised lamb on charred eggplant purée) and the eggplant pie. Both have been on the menu for decades and are what the kitchen does best. For dessert, the kazandibi (caramelised-bottom milk pudding) is the one to choose. Avoid the grilled meat section — it is fine but generic; the Ottoman-Greek dishes are why people come.

Does Pandeli serve dinner?

No. Pandeli is a lunch-only restaurant, open Monday to Saturday from approximately 11:30 to 16:00. It is closed on Sundays. Arrive by noon to guarantee the full menu — popular dishes sell out by mid-afternoon.

Do I need a reservation at Pandeli?

Reservations are strongly recommended for groups of four or more and for Saturday visits. The restaurant accepts walk-ins when tables are available, but the room fills quickly on weekday lunchtimes. Staff speak English and phone bookings are standard.

How do I get to Pandeli from Sultanahmet?

Take the T1 tram from Sultanahmet to the Eminönü stop — a five-minute ride. From the Galata side, cross the Golden Horn on foot over the Galata Bridge; the Spice Bazaar entrance is directly off the bridge ramp. From the Grand Bazaar, it is a twelve-minute walk downhill through the covered bazaar lanes.

Is Pandeli part of The Other Tour's food tour?

Yes. Pandeli is one of the stops on our Secret Flavors of Istanbul private food tour. Our guide visits with a contextual narration of the restaurant's history — from Pandeli Çobanoğlu's 1901 wooden shack to the state decree that placed the family here in 1956. That story lives in the room; a solo visitor rarely finds it on their own.

The Gentleman Guide of The Other Tour
Tolga Bensan
Learn more

Visit Pandeli with The Other Tour

Tour guide and guest walking past the Egyptian Spice Bazaar entrance in Eminönü, Istanbul

Pandeli is one of the tables we bring guests to on the Secret Flavors of Istanbul private food tour. A solo diner can order the hünkar beğendi and never learn any of this; what our guide adds is standing at that same table narrating how a Greek immigrant‘s wooden shack in Çukur Han grew, dish by dish, into the room a presidential decree handed the family in 1956. That story lives in the room, not on the menu — no solo visitor stumbles into it on their own.

Tell us your dates and roughly what you’d love to eat — we handle the reservation timing, reply within a day, and shape the rest of the meal around your pace and appetite.

Tags: CultureEminönüGreek Istanbulhistoric restaurantsHistoryMichelin Bib GourmandOttoman Greek cuisineSpice BazaarTurkish CuisineTurkish Culture
Share131Tweet82
Ömer Savaşçı

Ömer Savaşçı

Ömer Savaşçı is an Istanbul-born writer and engineering student with a lifelong fascination for history, ancient civilizations and the hidden systems that make the world work. He is currently studying Marine Engineering at Istanbul Technical University, bringing a practical understanding of machinery, engineering systems, coding and emerging technologies to his work. Raised in Istanbul, Ömer has spent his life surrounded by layers of history — yet he is still regularly surprised by how much there is left to discover. Turkey, with its extraordinary range of ancient cities, cultures and landscapes, continues to feed that curiosity. Through his writing for The Other Tour, he hopes to share that excitement with readers: the pleasure of looking closer, asking better questions, and finding stories that are often hiding in plain sight. Alongside his historical interests, Ömer works with game design, coding, AI tools, English-language research and social-media content production. His writing combines a young Istanbulite’s curiosity with a modern, analytical eye for culture, technology and travel.

Related Posts

Tour guide gesturing to explain the layout of Yedikule Fortress to two visitors, with the main Ottoman round tower and crenellated walls behind them
Byzantine Empire

Yedikule Fortress: Istanbul’s Seven Towers and Three Empires

Yedikule Fortress, Istanbul: the Golden Gate, a 1,500-year-old Byzantine sidewalk, and a sultan's prison cell in one walled complex.

Walls of Istanbul - Guided Istanbul Tour Itinerary - The Other Tour 2026
Istanbul Daily Tours

The Walls of Istanbul Tour

Discover Istanbul’s walls on a full-day tour linking Hippodrome, sea walls, aqueducts, Galata and Kadıköy across Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman history.

Four Days With Istanbul’s Cats and the People Who Love Them
Clients

Four Days With Istanbul’s Cats and the People Who Love Them

A four-day Istanbul cat tour blending street cats, historic neighborhoods, ferries, local life, and soulful encounters across the city.

Topkapi Palace entrance 2026 - The Other Tour
Istanbul Attractions

Topkapi Palace

With its rich history, stunning architecture, and beautiful gardens, Topkapi Palace is a must-visit attraction of the majestic Istanbul.

Pera – Istanbul’s Window to the West
Daily Tours

Alexandre Vallaury’s Legacy in Istanbul Architecture

Explore Alexandre Vallaury’s iconic works in Istanbul, from SALT Galata and Pera Palace to the Archaeology Museums and Bosphorus mansions.

Pera – Istanbul’s Window to the West
Istanbul Neighborhoods

Pera – Istanbul’s Window to the West

Discover Pera, Istanbul’s historic district filled with art, architecture, culture, and iconic landmarks like the Pera Palace Hotel.

Next Post
Craftsmanship Workshops with Highlights in Türkiye

Best Workshops and Traditional Crafts - Highlights in Türkiye

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Is Istanbul Safe - Kadikoy - The Other Tour

    Is it safe to travel to Turkey in 2026?

    16 shares
    Share 2288 Tweet 1430
  • Istanbul Earthquake: A 2026 Update

    42 shares
    Share 1926 Tweet 1204
  • Exploring Istanbul’s Asian Side

    10 shares
    Share 824 Tweet 515
  • The Mystery of Turkish Language

    46 shares
    Share 682 Tweet 427
  • Top 10 Masterpieces of Turkish Cinema

    1609 shares
    Share 644 Tweet 402

Our Tags

Aegean Sea Ancient City Ancient Civilizations Archaeology Architecture Arts & Culture Asian side Best Tours in Turkey Bosphorus Byzantine Legacy Cappadocia Church Constantinople Cruise Culture Day trips Environment Ephesus European Side Events and Happenings Fun Hagia Sophia Historic Landmarks History Hotels Istanbul Istanbul Tours Istanbul travel Istanbul Trip Istanbul Visit Mediterranean Museums Nature Ottomans Recommendations Religion Reviews Sultanahmet The Other Tour Tour Guide Turkey Turkey Travel Turkish Cuisine Turkish Culture Water

About us

We offer a unique, immersive city tour experience in Istanbul that explores lesser-known areas, engaging participants in cultural activities like local home visits, market explorations, and Bosphorus cruises.

In addition to our signature tour 'The Other Tour', our travel agency also provides a variety of wheelchair-assisted guided tours, custom itineraries, and specialized tours covering historical, cultural, and niche interests like Jewish heritage, vegan spots, and bird-watching. We also offer transportation services with professional guides for a more personalized and flexible experience.

Newsletter

The Other Tour is an immersive way to experience Istanbul and the rest of Turkey, led by licensed local guides who take you beyond the tourist spots into the lived culture and quiet corners of Cappadocia, Antalya, Ephesus, Bodrum, and the Mediterranean. We also build personalized travel planning, private tours, and custom itineraries — crafted around what you’re actually curious about, in any region of the country.

Company

  • Explore
  • 2026 Itinerary
  • Services
  • F.A.Q.
  • Blog
  • Philosophy
  • About Us
  • Our Team
  • Clients/Past Tours
  • Contact

Our Services

  • Private Tours
  • Private Tour Guides
  • Event Planning
  • Airport Transfers
  • Made-to-order
  • Hotel Selection
  • Culinary Tours
  • Shopping Tours
  • Unique Activities
  • Accessibility-Assisted Tours

Turkey

  • Destinations
  • Istanbul
  • Cappadocia
  • Ephesus
  • Pamukkale
  • Bodrum
  • Antalya
  • Mediterranean
  • Eastern Turkey
  • Black Sea
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Jobs
  • Get in touch

© 2026 THE OTHER TOUR by BEFORE TRAVEL - TÜRSAB NO: 7651.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Explore!
  • The Other Tour
    • Introduction
    • 2026 Itinerary
    • F.A.Q.
    • About us
    • Reviews
  • Daily Tours
    • Istanbul
    • Cappadocia
    • Antalya
    • Aegean
  • Tour Guides
    • Our Tour Guides
    • Istanbul
    • Ephesus
    • Cappadocia
    • Mediterranean Region
  • Istanbul
    • Tours
    • Attractions
    • Neighborhoods
    • Food
    • Stay
    • The Bosphorus
  • Turkey
    • Turkey Tours
    • Destinations
    • Cappadocia
    • Ephesus
    • Pamukkale
    • Antalya
    • Bodrum
  • Services
    • Private Tours
    • Daily City Tours
    • Made-to-order Travel Planning
    • Unique Activities
    • Hire a tour guide in Istanbul
    • Layover Tours
    • Culinary Tours
    • Hotel Selection
    • Family Time
    • Event Planning
    • Corporate Group Tours
    • All Our Services
  • Blog
    • TOP 5 ISTANBUL
    • Read
    • Events
    • News
    • Turkey
    • Documentary
    • Turkish Food
    • Turkish Music
    • Istanbul Videos
    • All Categories
    • All Posts
  • Contact

© 2026 THE OTHER TOUR by BEFORE TRAVEL - TÜRSAB NO: 7651.