Share this Story : Hum: Downtown Ottawa restaurant Sultan Ahmet serves compelling Turkish kebabs Copy Link Email X Reddit Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Breadcrumb Trail Links Travel Ottawa Life Food Local Food Reviews Hum: Downtown Ottawa restaurant Sultan Ahmet serves compelling Turkish kebabs The Bank Street eatery belongs to a wave of Turkish restaurants recently opened in Ottawa. Get the latest from Peter Hum straight to your inbox Sign Up Author of the article: Peter Hum Published Nov 07, 2024 • Last updated 50 minutes ago • 5 minute read Join the conversation You can save this article by registering for free here . Or sign-in if you have an account.
A mixed grill platter for two people sits at the centre of a table at Sultan Ahmet on Bank Street, surrounded by assorted dishes including lentil and chicken soup, dips, a signature salad and some lahmacun flatbread. TONY CALDWELL, Postmedia. Photo by Tony Caldwell / Postmedia Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected.
Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page. Article content Sultan Ahmet Turkish Cuisine Ottawa 575 Bank St., 343-688-0088, ottawa.
sultanahmet.ca Pomegranate-topped salad at the Sultan Ahmet on Bank Street in Ottawa Friday. Photo by Tony Caldwell / Postmedia Open: Monday 10 a.
m. to 10 p.m.
, Tuesday to Thursday 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.
m., Friday 11:30 a.m.
to 10:30 p.m., Saturday 9 a.
m. to 10 a.m.
, Sunday 9 a.m. to 10 p.
m. Prices: Appetizers $9 to $23, doner and kebab dinners $19 to $39 Access: Steps or ramp to front door, wheelchair-accessible washroom on ground floor, other washrooms downstairs Advertisement 2 Story continues below This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada.
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Activate your Online Access Now Article content Above and below the entrance to Sultan Ahmet Turkish Cuisine Ottawa are reminders of what it used to be. Look down and you’ll see the initials “CT” pressed into the steps. Overhead is a clocktower still bearing the logo of Ottawa’s first Clocktower Brew Pub, which poured beers for almost three decades on Bank Street, just south of the Queensway.
The exterior of Sultan Ahmet Turkish Cuisine on Bank Street in Ottawa. TONY CALDWELL, Postmedia. Photo by Tony Caldwell / Postmedia But restaurateur Sercun Ozturk and his partners expunged every other trace of the Clocktower with an “A-to-Z” renovation before they opened Sultan Ahmet in early April this year, a few months after the pub brand’s inaugural location closed.
(Three Clocktower Brew Pubs remain in Ottawa.) We’ve been to Ozturk’s restaurant three times this fall, and it consistently impressed us with the calibre of its reasonably priced food and its attentive service. Sercan Ozturk, part owner of Sultan Ahmet Turkish Cuisine Ottawa, poses for a photo inside his Bank Street restaurant.
The open kitchen can be seen behind him. TONY CALDWELL, Postmedia. Photo by Tony Caldwell / Postmedia This restaurant that seats about 100 in a bright, modern, comfortable dining room certainly ranks among Ottawa’s largest Turkish restaurants, along with the Turkish Kebab House, which opened in Kanata in 2022 and recently spun off a second location on Bank Street near Walkley Road.
Advertisement 3 Story continues below This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Article content Sultan Ahmet is also part of a chain launched just a few years ago, which has locations in Mississauga, Hamilton, and Oakville. Ozturk says that while he brought eight chefs from Turkey to work in his restaurant’s kitchen, they follow the recipes of his Toronto-based partner, who just happens to be named Sultan Ahmet.
Sultan Ahmet’s menu, like a prospectus filled with photos and detailed descriptions, offers a multitude of halal kebabs of chicken, beef and lamb, supported by salads and dips that celebrate simplicity and freshness. The special mixed grill dinner for two ($95), a feast for curious, empty-stomached carnivores, was large enough to generate significant leftovers. Sultan Ahmet special mix grill dinner for two (one beef skewer, two kofter, one skewer chicken shish, two lamb chops, one skewer lamb shish, beef and chicken doner meat, plus fries and bulgur) at Sultan Ahmet Ottawa on Bank Street.
Photo by Peter Hum / POSTMEDIA Its warmed platter teemed with well-prepared and tasty char-grilled meat, including two lamb chops, a lamb kebab skewer, a juicy chicken kebab skewer, a lightly spicy beef skewer and two minced beef (kofte) kebabs. In case we still needed more meat, there were shavings of still-moist chicken and beef doner meat too, as well as extra-crispy fries, more than enough tomato-y bulgur and salad. Advertisement 4 Story continues below This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content The mixed grill dinner for one ($39 for a beef kebab, a veal skewer and a chicken skewer) was more modest but still generous. From what I saw as it passed by my table, the special mix grill dinner for six ($225) was truly epic. The chef’s mixed grill for one person included three different kebabs at Sultan Ahmet on Bank Street Photo by Peter Hum / POSTMEDIA However, passing up samplers and committing to a specific main, with just one kind of kebab and a sauce, had its benefits too.
We were all big fans of two Ali Nazik dishes ($32). This specialty of Turkey’s Gaziantep province featured juicy lamb or chicken kebabs on top of a luscious purée of smokey eggplant and garlicky yogurt. Ali Nazik with lamb at Sultan Ahmet Ottawa on Bank Street Photo by Peter Hum / POSTMEDIA Another regional dish, which excited me less, was the plate of Iskender kebabs that coated either chicken ($27) or beef doner meat ($30) in tomato sauce and melted butter and served it with a giant dollop of yogurt on the side.
Chicken iskender kebab at Sultan Ahmet Ottawa on Bank Street Photo by Peter Hum / POSTMEDIA Excellent for sharing was a platter of beyti sarma kebab ($29), in which beef chunks were wrapped in flatbread and topped with tomato sauce. Beyti sarma beef kebab at Sultan Ahmet Ottawa on Bank Street Photo by Peter Hum / POSTMEDIA For lighter appetites, I could recommend the lahmacun with salad ($18), a thin flatbread topped with minced beef and a tomato-based spread, which we wrapped around greens, onions and tomatoes. Advertisement 5 Story continues below This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content Lahmacun at Sultan Ahmet Ottawa on Bank Street Photo by Peter Hum / POSTMEDIA More substantial was a beef doner pide ($23), one of more than a dozen heftier, cheesier, boat-shaped breads on the menu. Beef doner pide at Sultan Ahmet Ottawa on Bank Street Photo by Peter Hum / POSTMEDIA For vegetarians at this meat-forward restaurant, the vegetarian or spinach pide or the falafel platter, perhaps preceded by one of several house salads, might be ways to go. All of our starters were straightforward and top-notch, from bowls of savoury lentil soup and creamy chicken soup to superior dips that ranged from hummus to baba ghanoush to ezme, a slightly spicy tomato-based dip, to cacik, a yogurt-based dip.
($10 individually, $23 for all four dips, both with bread). Lentil soup at Sultan Ahmet Ottawa on Bank Street Photo by Peter Hum / POSTMEDIA Dips at Sultan Ahmet Turkish Cuisine on Bank Street, including, from left to right, baba ganoush, ezme (a spiced tomato-based dip), hummus and cacik (a yogurt and cucumber dip) TONY CALDWELL, Postmedia. Photo by Tony Caldwell / Postmedia Most dessert choices here were types of baklava brought in from Montreal, served optionally with ice cream, either made in Canada or brought in from Turkey.
I’ve recently confessed my enthusiasm for Syrian baklava , but I might yet be swayed by the more syrupy and even creamy options at Sultan Ahmet. Havuc Dilimi Baklava at Sultan Ahmet Ottawa on Bank Street Photo by Peter Hum / POSTMEDIA Midye Baklava at Sultan Ahmet Ottawa on Bank Street was stuffed with a cream filling of walnuts and pistachios. Photo by Peter Hum / POSTMEDIA Sultan Ahmet is, of course, not licensed.
But it does serve many mocktails and fruity or candy-based shakes, as well as Turkish coffee and tea and Barbican, the non-alcoholic malt drink. Advertisement 6 Story continues below This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Article content In addition to lunch and dinner, Sultan Ahmet serves Turkish breakfasts on weekends, when reservations are required.
Ozturk says his restaurant’s been well received in the seven months since it opened. I’ve seen that on weekends, in particular, it can be packed and boisterous. It used to be that Ottawa’s only Turkish dining option was the Little Turkish Village in Orléans, which has been open for more than three decades.
But Sultan Ahmet belongs to a wave of 10 or so Turkish restaurants that have opened in Ottawa in the last two years, from quick, takeout-focused shops in suburban strip malls to larger, higher-volume, dine-in eateries. Ozturk is magnanimous about his rivals. “All Turkish restaurants are doing very good, people like Turkish cuisine,” he says.
But in my experience, among the restaurants like it, Sultan Ahmet is one of the very best. [email protected] Want to stay in the know about what’s happening in Ottawa? Sign up for the Ottawa Citizen’s arts and life newsletter — Ottawa, Out of Office — our weekly guide to eating, listening, reading, watching, playing, hanging, learning and living well in the capital.
Recommended from Editorial Hum: Homey, tasty Lebanese food at Allo Beirut departs from shawarma stereotype Hum: Four spots to find Ottawa tacos loaded with braised suadero, fried carnitas, and more Article content Share this article in your social network Share this Story : Hum: Downtown Ottawa restaurant Sultan Ahmet serves compelling Turkish kebabs Copy Link Email X Reddit Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Comments You must be logged in to join the discussion or read more comments. Create an Account Sign in Join the Conversation Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion. Please keep comments relevant and respectful.
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Hum: Downtown Ottawa restaurant Sultan Ahmet serves compelling Turkish kebabs
The Bank Street eatery belongs to a wave of Turkish restaurants recently opened in Ottawa.