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How to Make Turkish Coffee That's Actually Foamy and Frothy!

#TurkishCoffee #TürkKahvesi #PaulCrompton Making good Turkish coffee (Türk kahvesi in Turkish), can be really hard. With my (hard-learned) tips, you'll be making great Turkish coffee in no time! Timestamps so you can skip straight to the bit you want to see: 00:00 - Hear my awesome jingle again! 00:44 - What you need to get started 00:59 - The Turkish coffee brand I use 01:14 - How much coffee you need to add 01:28 - Cool tip - 'roasting' the coffee grounds 01:44 - How much water to add 02:10 - Stirring the coffee 02:36 - Don't leave your coffee alone! 02:48 - How long the coffee needs to cook 03:02 - Tapping the coffee pot, or Jezve 03:26 - How to know your coffee is almost ready 03:37 - Pouring the coffee into your cups (pour slowly) 04:01 - What to do if some grounds didn't dissolve 04:10 - The Turkish coffee is ready! 04:24 - Thank you and please like, comment, and subscribe! ➡ Need more detailed steps? Read my full run-down and technique (WARNING: It's long!):   / why-you-should-try-turkish-coffee-and-how-...   You need: Turkish coffee grinds (or VERY finely ground coffee beans, medium roast) Turkish coffee pot (or Jezve/Cezve/Ibrik) Small coffee cup Teaspoon Fresh, cold water Stove/oven top, preferably gas, but electric also works Piece of wood for stirring Backstory: When I first started making Turkish coffee (also calledΤούρκικος καφές in Greek, قهوة تركية‎ in Arabic), which is also popular in parts of the Middle East and Eastern Europe, it was a huge fail. I spent so much time reading online and watching videos how to make frothy, foamy Turkish coffee, rather than lifeless and flat coffee - and picked up tips along the way. But there wasn't really one definitive source in one place that taught me everything I'd need to learn to make good Turkish coffees I'd actually want to serve friends or family. It's taken me probably over ONE HUNDRED cups of really bad Turkish to finally make really frothy ones - and even then, I sometimes ruin it! Please also note: I'm sure most Turkish people can make far better coffee than me - this is just my own humble journey in making this awesome speciality! Of course, for the frothiest, foamiest Turkish coffee in the world, you'd need to head to a street cafe in Turkey, or a Turkish person's home. Enjoy - and good luck with your Turkish coffee!

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