
I didn’t need Google Maps to find the fish sandwiches. I just followed the smoke.
Location: Eminönü, Golden Horn
Time: 12:30 PM
Mood: Overwhelmed and Hungry
Walking from the spice-scented chaos of the Egyptian Bazaar towards the water, the air changed. It stopped smelling of cinnamon and started smelling of grilled mackerel and charcoal. Then I saw them: the three famous, gaudy boats bobbing violently on the Golden Horn, looking like something out of an Ottoman Disneyland.
This wasn’t a restaurant. This was a battleground of hunger.
The Chaos of Ordering
I approached the boats. The crowd was a mix of tourists holding selfie sticks and locals rushing to catch a ferry. The men on the boats were shouting, “Balık Ekmek! Balık Ekmek! Buyurun!” while flipping fish fillets on a grill that was moving up and down with the waves. I honestly don’t know how they don’t get seasick.
I didn’t wait to be seated. There is no host here. I elbowed my way to the front and shouted, “Bir tane!” (One!).
150 Lira changed hands (cash only, always cash here). In return, I was handed a quarter-loaf of white bread, still hot from the grill, wrapped in paper.
The First Bite
I found a small plastic stool on the pavement. It was wobbly, but it was mine. I sat down, facing the Galata Tower across the water.
I opened the bread. Inside, it was simple: a grilled mackerel fillet, a generous handful of raw onions, and some lettuce. That’s it. No fancy sauce, no avocado, no nonsense.
But there was one crucial step missing. On the tables, there were bottles of lemon juice. I grabbed one and drenched the fish. Then I shook salt over it.
I took the first bite. It was crunchy, fishy, and incredibly fresh. The bitterness of the charred skin mixed with the sharp bite of the raw onion. It wasn’t the best meal I’ve ever had in my life, but in that specific moment, with the wind blowing off the Bosphorus and the seagulls screaming above my head hoping for crumbs, it tasted exactly like Istanbul.
The Red Pickle Juice (Turşu Suyu)
A man walked by with a cart full of cups filled with a dark red liquid. “Turşu suyu!” I had read about this. Pickle juice. It sounded terrible. I ordered one anyway.
It was spicy. It was sour. It was cold. I took a sip of the neon-red juice and then a bite of the oily fish sandwich. Suddenly, it made sense. The acid of the pickle juice cut through the oil of the mackerel perfectly. It was a chemical reaction on my tongue.
The Verdict
As I wiped the grease off my chin, I watched a ferry depart for Kadıköy. The smoke from the grill was still stinging my eyes.
Is Balık Ekmek a tourist trap? Maybe. Is the fish sometimes imported from Norway instead of caught in the Bosphorus? Probably.
But sitting there, surrounded by the noise of 16 million people, eating a simple sandwich that costs less than a coffee in Paris, I felt connected to the city. It was raw, it was messy, and it was real.
If you come to Istanbul, don’t just eat the fish. Eat the chaos.
My “Eat Walk Repeat” Note for Today:
- Eat: The Balık Ekmek (don’t forget the extra lemon).
- Walk: Cross the Galata Bridge on foot to burn off the white bread.
- Repeat: Stop halfway on the bridge to watch the fishermen casting their lines.
Explore More of My Istanbul Diaries:
If you enjoyed this diary, check out the rest of my Istanbul series to see the city through a local lens:
🍽️ Eat & Drink
- Street Food Diaries: The Fish Sandwich (Balık Ekmek) at Galata Bridge
- Turkish Breakfast Ritual: Why We Sat at a Table for 4 Hours in Beşiktaş
🎟️ Things To Do
- The Hamam Experience: Letting Go of Stress at Kılıç Ali Paşa
- The Ferry Ritual: Crossing Continents with Tea and Seagulls
🗺️ Itineraries
- A Day of Two Continents: Breakfast in Europe, Coffee in Asia
- Sultanahmet at Dawn: Walking the Old City Before the Tourists Wake Up
🚇 Essentials
- Istanbulkart Diaries: My Magic Key to the City (and How Not to Get Stuck)
- Arriving in Chaos: My Journey from IST Airport to the City Center
🏘️ Neighborhoods
- Neighborhood Diaries: Kadıköy & Moda (The Cool Side)
- Getting Lost in Balat: Colorful Houses, Steep Hills & Hidden Antiques












