Istanbul, Turkey — documented in Ottoman records from the 16th century; the simitçi trolley is a permanent fixture of Istanbul street culture
Istanbul's iconic circular bread covered in sesame seeds is produced by rolling yeasted dough into a loop, dipping in pekmez (grape molasses) diluted with water to create a sticky coating, then rolling in raw sesame seeds before baking until deep amber and crunchy. The pekmez dip is the defining technique: the molasses sugars caramelise rapidly during baking, creating a crackly, lacquered, slightly sweet exterior crust that adheres the sesame seeds permanently and distinguishes simit from plain sesame breads. The interior crumb is chewy and open. Simits are sold by street vendors (simitçi) from large red trolleys across Istanbul; they are eaten for breakfast with tea, white cheese, and olives. The Istanbul version is crunchy; Ankara simit is softer and bread-like — a contested regional distinction.
Breakfast staple eaten with tea, beyaz peynir, and olives; also midday snack or afternoon with tea; best eaten within an hour of baking when the sesame crust is at peak crunch; slightly stale simit is often dunked in tea
{"Dip in diluted pekmez (1 part grape molasses to 3 parts water) for 30 seconds — the thin coating caramelises without burning; undiluted molasses is too thick and burns black","Roll in sesame seeds while wet — sesame must be pressed firmly into the molasses coating to adhere; loose seeds fall off during baking","Bake at 230°C on a hot baking stone — the bottom heat produces the characteristic crunchy underside; without a hot surface, the base remains pale and soft","The dough should be lean (no fat) — fat creates a tender crumb when a chewy, structured crumb is required"}
The pekmez dilution ratio can be adjusted for colour: more pekmez produces a darker, glossier result that looks more dramatic but carries more sweetness. The most experienced simitçi shape the ring by stretching the dough rope into a loop and twisting twice before joining the ends — the twist creates a subtly different surface area and bite texture than a plain join. Rest shaped simit 10 minutes before dipping in pekmez: the slight skin that forms holds the molasses coating better.
{"Substituting honey for pekmez — honey lacks the colour, acidity, and caramelisation profile of grape molasses; the exterior stays pale and the sesame doesn't develop the amber gloss","Under-seeding — a properly made simit is almost entirely covered in sesame; patches of bare dough are a quality indicator","Room-temperature baking surface — simit must go onto a preheated stone or steel; cold surfaces produce soft, pale bases","Thick dough rings — simit should be 2–2.5cm in cross-section; thicker rings take longer to bake through and the exterior over-colours before the centre sets"}