Mucver (Turkish Zucchini Fritters)

Good. Food. Stories. Contributor

by Good. Food. Stories. Contributor on February 26, 2010

Today we happily welcome new contributor Berfu Durantas-Masters. Born in Istanbul, she recently married her husband John with one nagging worry—could they eat together, happily ever after?


One of the earliest conversations between my husband and I during our days of courtship was about food. He is half English-Irish and half Greek, and it was this morsel of Mediterranean blood that gave me hope that he would revel in my olive oil-based Turkish cooking. Our short food conversation ended with me asking alarmingly, “What do you mean you don’t like fried fish or olive oil? You’re half Greek, for God’s sake!” And so our culinary adventure began.

My husband likes store-bought salad dressing, Hot Pockets, frozen pizza (frozen anything, really), Eggo’s, and American cheese. Basically his palate craves chemicals and freezer burn. This is a far cry from the fresh foods and everything made from scratch mentality that I grew up with. So as our wedding day quickly approached, the questions arose as to how I would feed the 6’3” love of my life. How could I possibly get him to let go of the butter and dip his bread into olive oil instead? Would he ever eat a salad without ready-made blue cheese dressing? Would he ever like vegetables?

Since I couldn’t regress from eating well, it was apparent that I needed to change his palate, slowly and cleverly. One of the first dishes I made was mucver, which are fried zucchini fritters, a very popular dish in Turkey. I figured he would eat anything fried (well, maybe not fish).

Image courtesy of www.talerka.ru

This is a very versatile dish; you can add shredded carrots, potatoes, and/or onions to your fritter batter if you, unlike John, enjoy more than one vegetable. It tastes best when eaten with garlic yogurt (a clove of crushed garlic mixed and chilled with a a cup of yogurt).

Husband’s verdict: he loved it! He couldn’t believe zucchinis could taste so good, and even ate the yogurt! So far, so good. Now, what green thing can I convince him to eat next…

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{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }

Fran February 26, 2010 at 12:19 am

I love Zucchini feta fritters. They make a great side for so many dishes. I just might have to make them to go with osso buco tomorrow.

And I think this is an awesome way to help cultivate someone’s palate. The good news is that he really had no place to go but up from Hot Pockets to home cooked Mediterranean food.

Sarah Olson February 26, 2010 at 10:24 am

Great story! What a cool spin on fritters, this one I have to try.

sarah t February 26, 2010 at 1:09 pm

great story–thanks! these sound delicious, and i look forward to hearing about the next step in the palate transformation.

Julie February 26, 2010 at 5:06 pm

Great story! I am looking forward to part 2. :)

ilana February 28, 2010 at 1:33 pm

Made these today and they turned out pretty well but I would love if you could update the recipe with exact quantities of the feta, etc. Overall they felt more liquid than they should despite adding extra flour. I was wondering if I even needed the egg because of the moisture in the zucchini.

Berfu Durantas Masters March 2, 2010 at 4:41 pm

You definitely need the egg, one should suffice. As far as the quantities, I usually improvise. It depends on how many fritters you want to make. Alot of fritters? Use more zucchinis. Fewer fritters? fewer zucchinis. same with the cheese. If you are using 3-4 medium zucchinis, a little less than half a cup of crumbled feta cheese should be enough.

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