Içli Köfte

Köfte get around – they respect no national boundary, and they can be made with anything, from meat, fish, vegetables or even cheese. There are, without exaggeration, hundreds of kinds köfte with varying names as they move from culture to culture or even recipe to recipe. However, the concept of köfte is so generic that one cannot source it to any one location – as long as humans have chopped, ground, or pounded meat into conveniently-sized portions, köfte have been around and been known by various names. The earliest mention of ground balls of meat – essentially what köfte are – that I am aware of is in the 4th century Roman cookbook, De Re Coquinaria, by Caelius Apicus.

Içli köfte is Turkish for stuffed meatballs, and I am sure that translation killed the romance, mystique, and exoticism of this recipe! Now that any potential for aantel-ing has been thoroughly butchered, Istanbul has some spectacular içli köfte, though I have to admit, Elâzığ has some serious harput köftesi. Içli köfte is almost identical to the Sicilian arancini, which itself was brought in by the Arabs. Anyway, the term köfte has two plausible origins: some say it comes from a Turkic dialect in which the term means ‘small ball,’ while others claim that it comes from the Persian کوفته (kufteh) which means ‘to beat’ or ‘to grind.’ Thankfully, etymological battles do not take away from the taste!

Basically, the diversity in köfte comes from six core choices:

  1. the minced meat used – lamb or beef
  2. the onion – grated or chopped
  3. the cooking style – fried, grilled, or baked
  4. the variety and combination of spices
  5. the type and amount of oil or butter used if fried
  6. the amount of fat on the meat

Some common variations of köfte you will see in Turkey are:

Okay…now that you are a Köfte Grandmaster, perhaps we should get into our tasty morsel, the içli köfte! For all that talk about this being a mere stuffed meatball, making the bulgur shells is not the easiest task for a culinary n00b.

Ingredients:

Preparation time: Overnight marination + 60 minutes

Cooking time: 30 minutes

Serves: 6-8

Process:

Stuffing:

Shell:

Köfte:

Afiyet olsun!