Mercimekli Köfte — Lentil Kofte
January 21st, 2007
This is a very common dish with the red lentils and bulgur made all over Turkey. It is one of the dishes that can be eaten as a main course for a light meal or served along with homemade pastries in the afternoon tea gatherings.
I remember the first time I ever made this with a friend, 4 or 5 years ago, the taste was there but didn’t look anything like what you see in the picture. This is not to say that it needs to be mastered, but you need to be careful of the water amount used when cooking the lentils. If you put too much, you might end up adding more bulgur than the recipe calls for otherwise. So, I suggest starting with the amount I give here, but keep a boiling cup of water close by to add on if needed.
It goes well with the basic onion salad I am going to share. In fact, I do not think I have ever seen it served without this salad. Also, I like serving on a bed of lettuce leaves garnished with olive oil + salt + lemon juice trio. The more lemon juice the better, if you ask me. Using the lettuce, parsley and green onions growing in our backyard makes it easy to gather ingredients for this meal without a trip to the grocery store…
Another side note: the recipe calls for fine bulgur, which is easy to find in the Middle Eastern stores. If you use the coarse bulgur, not only it might take more water to “cook it” but also it will not be as easy to shape as using the fine variety. Here, bulgur is not cooked, but rather soaked with the steaming hot lentils.
- 1 cup of red lentils
- 1.5 cup of fine bulgur
- 1 bunch of flat leaf parsley (chopped finely makes about 1.5 cups)
- 4 - 5 green onions (chopped finely makes about 1 cup)
- 1/3 cup of olive oil (not extra virgin)
- 1 medium onion
- 1 Tbs tomato paste
- 1 Tbs red pepper paste
- salt to taste
for onion salad
- 1 medium onion
- 1 tsp sumac
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1/2 cup parsley leaves (finely chopped)
extra: lemon juice as extra garnishing
In a medium size pan, put the red lentils and 1.5 cups of water, cover and cook on low heat until water evaporates, lentils are cooked. If lentils are not cooked yet, add more boiling water but make sure not to add too much to leave the mix watery.
Put the bulgur in a big bowl, add the cooked lentils mix well and cover the bowl — strech film works great.
In the mean time clean and cut the parsley and green onions fine.
Cut the onion in very small pieces, cook them with olive oil using a small saucepan. Add the tomato and red pepper paste, cook until onions are very soft.
When the onion mixture has cooled down, add it along with the chopped greens to the lentil mix.
Now you have all the ingredients to make your lentil balls in one bowl. Mix them by hand, lightly knead as needed. If too dry, you can add more olive oil or hot water to the mix — again be careful not to add a huge amount at once.
Take a chunk a bit bigger than walnut size, roll in your palm and fingers to give it a shape. Shape all of the mix in this way.
Salad:
Cut the onion in half. Making very thin slices, cut it all the way. Add the sumac and salt, work them through the onion making sure the onion releases its juice. This will make it easy for you to digest the onion. Add lemon juice if desired. You can add finely chopped lettuce if you would like as well.
Serve room temperature or slightly colder.


January 22nd, 2007 at 1:33 am
That looks so good. I can’t wait to try this.
January 25th, 2007 at 3:48 am
kiz muhtesem gorunuyor inan muayenehanede agzimiz sulandi
dunde bizde vardi afiyet olsun
January 26th, 2007 at 7:39 pm
I made it!!!
I have no way to compare because I have never taste it, but mine tasted good. But… I think I had to add more water so lentils and bulgur can blend better. Next time!!! I put a photo in my blog if you want to see how they resulted. :-D
January 27th, 2007 at 1:17 pm
Ok, I made it too.
My mother kept saying “Are you sure you don’t need to fry it? Why doesn’t it say to fry it?! I’ve never seen Kofte not fried before…”
But she is Hungarian and knows nothing about kofte in the first place, so I ignored her and stuck to your directions.
We all really liked it. It’s a great light, cheap and tasty dish. Great going.
January 28th, 2007 at 10:54 am
Zulmy and Lolalilu, you guys are so courageous!
Zulmy, now you know, you can add more water to make sure they stick to each other. It is one of those dishes that amounts vary every time you make it.
Lolalilu, your mom is right about kofte being fried, but not this one. Usually the name kofte is used for meatballs — hence you need to somehow cook them. One thing for sure: in Turkey we overuse the term kofte!
Canan abla: benim de agzim sulaniyordu yaparken, hele ki bol limonlu salatayla! Senin kisirin gibi degil ama, o baska…
January 29th, 2007 at 3:05 pm
No fry kofte ? need to try this
January 31st, 2007 at 1:56 pm
These look delicious. I’m always on the lookout for vegetarian kofta, and one that isn’t deep-fried is a find indeed. Thanks for posting this!
February 1st, 2007 at 9:15 am
Hi !!! I will try it tomorrow!! It seems really nice recipe. As I have never tried it before, do you think we can serve it with yogurt as well ? The taste might be more fresh…. :) What do you think?
February 1st, 2007 at 4:15 pm
Krithika & april, I hope you’ll like its taste, too.
Kalypso, I am not sure how well it will go with yogurt — never tried it that way. Usually, a nice salad accompanies this dish. Let me know if you try with yogurt.
June 4th, 2007 at 11:36 am
Looks good but it is really tasty???????? I cannot imagine……
June 28th, 2007 at 9:22 am
I tried it
the taste was a surprise ,, it`s soo good
thank u :)
July 11th, 2007 at 11:56 pm
Ah such great memories! We tried this when we were in Fethiye last month at Somine Kebap restaurant. It was super.
Glad we have found this site and hopefully my Turkish cooking will improve!