Cacık (IPA pronunciation: /dʒɑːdʒɨk/) is a
Turkish dish of seasoned, diluted
yoghurt, eaten throughout the former
Ottoman world. In
Greece it is called
tzatziki. It is served cold in very small bowls usually as a
side dish or with ice cubes.
Cacık is made of yogurt,
salt,
olive oil, crushed
garlic, chopped
cucumber,
dill,
mint, and
lime juice, diluted with water to a low consistency, and garnished with
sumac. Among these ingredients, olive oil, lime juice, and sumac are optional. Dill and mint (fresh or dried) may be used alternately. Cacık, when consumed as a
meze, is prepared without water but follows the same recipe. Ground
paprika may also be added when it is prepared as a meze. As a rarer recipe, when prepared with
lettuce or
carrots instead of cucumber, it is named
kış cacığı (winter cacık).
A similar side dish prepared in India is known as raita. Particularly popular in the state of Maharashtra, it is prepared with cucumbers, onions, tomatoes and quite often, grated carrots. Unlike other versions, lime juice is not used in raita. Further differences in the Indian dish include heated oil, mustard seeds and asafoetida and a tadka is given to the consistency of yoghurt and the other vegetables.
Trivia
Cacık is mentioned in the The Alice B. Toklas Cookbook.
See also
References
External links