An Iskendar Kabab in Deira that Needs to be Revered, Glorified, Idolized. (…and eaten when the others aren’t looking.)

blank A few of you might have suffered through my obsessive Iskendar kabab ramblings in the past—and this is definitely going to be another one of them. Because Iskendar kabab is that attention-grabber of Turkish kabab dishes that I will never stop loving. How can you not fall in love with shawarma-thin, crisp-juicy slivers of lamb and beef sprawled out on toasty cushions of pide bread, dripping wet with tomato sauce and cool yogurt, exhaling the soft seductive breath of melted butter all over your face as you lean in for a bite?

(I guess you can’t if you’re vegetarian. But moving on…)

I thought I’d tasted many a version of Iskendar Kabab in the city. Despite the many versions I’ve tasted across Dubai (Harput, BosphorusKosebasiAnkara, the now defunct Shikidim, and my fav, Istanbul Flower), I have never tasted one like the one I’ve had at Yildiz Saray, the new Turkish restaurant in Deira. It was like a gourmet French version of the very rustic, elemental dish that I’ve greedily inhaled at other places. This good-looking hunk of a kabab plate just…blew me away.

Iskendar Kabab - Yildiz Saray - Turkish Restaurant Dubai

The kabab slices were soft, chewy, drenched in this incredibly creamy tomato gravy that coats and massages your tongue in ways I haven’t previously experienced with Iskendar Kabab. Thick strained yogurt was sculpted on top in an ivory-white dollop, a subtly sour restraining order on all the other rich elements of the dish. Of course there was melted butter, the key element of any Iskendar Kabab creation. Butter on the pide bread chunks lining the bottom of the plate, butter seeping through the cracks between the kabab slices, butter in the air, butter here, butter there, butter blissfully EVERYWHERE.

I’m still mulling over how the chef got his tomatoes to assume that luscious, pasta sauce-like texture that was drizzled all over the dish, that too without any cream (to my credit, I did pester the chef for what went into that dreamy sauce after the meal). I doubt the tomatoes in my apartment could ever be elevated to that magical league.

If and when I can manage to look past the Iskendar Kabab, everything else at Yildiz Saray was spot on. The bread was fresh bouncy pide dotted with sesame seeds, but beware—eat in moderation or kill your appetite for the kababs to follow.

Pide bread - Yildiz Saray - Turkish Restaurant Dubai

What made it even harder to keep my fingers away from the darned bread basket was this bright tomato-red pepper paste, Ezme, which was tasty not just because it was complementary but because it was born tasty to begin with. Like everything else at Yildiz Saray, it had been thoughtfully composed and balanced—the sweetness of the red peppers, a surprising olive-ish undertone, and a tartness from the shallow maroon rivulet of pomegranate sauce that had been trickled over it. I mean, hear me will you—I can’t even use my usual klutzy words and moronic expressions to describe the meal. Just thinking of the dinner wipes all the resident clowns out of my mind and replaces them with…pretty fluttering butterflies and singing nightingales. And unicorns, there are definitely unicorns.

Ezme -  - Yildiz Saray - Turkish Restaurant Dubai

Two baby eggplants emerged as our Imam Bayildi. Each one was a little Noah’s arc anchored in a shallow lake of cherry tomatoes and tomato pulp, with sweet fried eggplant flesh, caramelized onions and an unexpected patch of cheese on board.

Imam Bayildi -  - Yildiz Saray - Turkish Restaurant Dubai

The lahmacun might have been the least of my favourites. The Turkish Pizza had an applaudable char under its crispy base, but the crunch was louder than the quietly thin layer of minced meat sprinkled scantily on top. Give us more meat chef, that’s almost always the answer: MORE MEAT.

Lahmacun - Yildiz Saray - Turkish Restaurant Dubai

We ended the meal with dessert and cups of Turkish tea. They serve you one pot of concentrated tea, and one pot of hot water, and you make your own optimally strong cup of tea by combining the two at the table. I’m totally using that strategy if a barrage of fussy Indian aunties every visits me for tea in the future.

Turkish Tea - Yildiz Saray - Turkish Restaurant Dubai

Kunafa made the dessert cut, only because they don’t have the right baklava supplier yet nor did they have the Turkish (dondurma) ice cream mentioned on the menu. Which was not a terrible thing, because kunafa is a perfectly acceptable way of ending a Turkish meal. Much lighter than the Palestinian and Lebanese/Syrian versions that I’ve tried, the Turkish kunafa at Yildiz Saray was more like a crunchy nest of angel-light pastry strands. If there was cheese within, I didn’t really notice it (as opposed to the in-your-face mattress of sweet melty gooey cheese that I’m used to bedding with when I do a Lebanese/Syrian kunafa run.) What’s critical to notice on the plate is not the ice cream – skip it if you’re rationing tummy space for the final dessert run – but the insignificant looking swirl of tahini on the side. DO NOT WASTE IT. Dot your kunafa with it, and ascend to a new level called “Hallelujah Chef. You are a Genius.”

Kunafa - Yildiz Saray - Turkish Restaurant Dubai

This place is a real revelation inside, and you can be sure that I’ll be dragging every guest who visits me in Dubai till I’ve tried every last thing on the menu (yeah okay, who am I fooling. I’m just going to end up ordering the Iskendar kabab everytime. So if you go, be an angel and try something else…and report back, will ya?)

Yildiz Saray - Turkish Restaurant Dubai

Yildiz Saray
Maktoum Street (same line as Al Khaleej Palace), Deira Dubai. Link to my super-approximate Google Map.
Phone: (04) 252-2412
Website: http://www.yildizsaray.ae/

Author: InaFryingPan

With a family legacy of ingenious cooks, a nutritionist and chef-extraordinaire mother, and a father who introduced me to steak and caviar when I could barely reach the table, I had no choice but to acquire a keen awareness of food during my childhood years in Dubai. But it was only after I found myself on a college campus in Philadelphia – far away from home, too cheap as a student to spend on anything other than pizza, and with dorm rooms that had little rat-holes of kitchens if they even had them at all – when I developed a heightened appreciation of food. An appreciation of food that I once ate every night at the dinner table in Dubai, but that was now an entire ocean away. I lusted for the culinary treasures that lay outside the stale walls of my college dining hall, hijacked friends’ kitchens to try my hand at something, anything , remotely edible, and greedily raided different websites in search of highly-rated restaurants. With my move to New York to work for a consulting firm that secretly harbored self-professed foodies, my appreciation transformed into a passion, an addicition. I felt like everyone around me in New York was talking about food: where to get the best cupcakes, pizza slices, banh mi, kati rolls, pho, fried chicken, and every other food item out there that is just a plain old dish in some part of the world, but that’s become hyped to unforeseen proportions in New York. What fuelled my addiction over time was travel to different cities, both for work and play, which gave me unfettered access to the culinary havens of not only New York, but also of DC, Virginia, Chicago, Houston, Vegas, Austin, Seattle and even a little city called Bentonville (Arkansas!). After 9 years away from home, I’ve finally taken the leap to come back to Dubai – with not just an awareness, but genuine appreciation and passionate addiction for what I’d taken for granted as a child. Mom, I’m back to reclaim my seat at your dinner table, and to rediscover this city with its ever-expanding menu of international flavors.

6 thoughts on “An Iskendar Kabab in Deira that Needs to be Revered, Glorified, Idolized. (…and eaten when the others aren’t looking.)

    1. inafryingpan says:

      @twitter-341731963:disqus – It’s pricier than most of the restaurants I review. I could imagine it being AED 80 to 100 per head, though obviously that depends on what and how many dishes you order.

  1. JayEim says:

    Great write up. Thank you.

    However, as there is always a However, the Eskandar Kabab does not look very authentic and seems to have grown up in a touristic fashion. The main variant of Eskandar Kebab is the Yogurt which gives it the velvety and tangy taste. Using strained yogurt or Labneh so to speak in the shape of an Ice Cream scoop does wonders to presentation but moves farther away from the original taste.
    I am sure the dish taste very nice but it is not the expectation of an Eskandar Kebab.

    The Batindjan Imam Bayildi in the authentic version should be nestled in a thick sauce of onions, tomatoe and EVOO. I cannot see this is the case.
    The Litmus test of a Batindjan Imam Bayildi is the single garlic clove resting in the slit Aubergine.
    I appreciate that most of the recipes printed or digital show unfortunately a variant of the original dish!

    For me, this is not Authentic Turkish food but a Modern variant of Turkish food. This does not negate the restaurant offering and value but merely positions the restaurant in a more defined category.

    For the dessert, such does not exist. If it is Kunafa, it has to be either cheese or nuts or cream filled.

    As for having Tahinah with the dish. We do have Tahineh as part of a sweet dessert. One of our Levant sweet delicacies is called: Debs weh Theeneh. Which means Molasses and Tahineh mixed together and eaten with Arabic bread.

    The Debs Molasses has to be the Levant version which is Carob Molasses. This is different from the Egyptian Molasses which is a Dates Molasses similar to the Gulf area Molasses or Grapes Molasses as I suspect they are using in this Turkish restaurant with the Kunafa or maybe some other sweet jam of some fruit?

    All good fun.

    Reply
    1. inafryingpan says:

      JayEim – thanks for taking the time out to leave such a thoughtful and detailed response!

      A couple of thoughts –

      Yes, completely agree that this is not authentic Turkish, but as I have put it – a more modern, ’Frenchified’ version of the dishes. But excellent nevertheless.

      Just to clarify, the kunafa was filled with cheese, just not a glaringly thick layer of it.

      Debs weh Tahina – I have tried dates with tahina, still got to try Debs with Tahina. As for what the restaurant used, my palate wasn’t as discerning as it should have been to figure it out – so my guess is as good as yours!

  2. Heidi says:

    Went here after reading your review and the sauce on the Iskander Kebab was just as you described – rich, velvety and leaving your tongue asking for more! And the Ezme with the bread too, absolutely delicious. We were too full to have desert and it came to more than our usual Hor Al Anz haunts, but deffo worth a visit for something special. Thanks again ILIAFP!!!

    PS I know I appear to be stalking your recent restaurant visits but I promise my intentions are purely food-related lol.

    Reply
  3. jassimali says:

    The best bohra (or is it bohri) food experiences that i have had are both home deliveries..its a multi course affair punctuated with ice cream !

    Reply

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