As a fellow Turkish delight enjoyer, this thread has been eye opening.
I'm working on a theory: most commenters are probably American. Their sweets have so much sugar content over here that I'm starting to believe they don't like Turkish delights because they are somehow less sugary ?
As an American, I can day it's definitely not the sweetness to me. I find Turkish delight very sweet, almost too sweet. The texture is mostly what hangs me up, as well as a weird flavor I can't put my finger on. It reminds me of gum drop candies? Which are the least popular candies by a lot here, as any child on Halloween will tell you lol.
It may just be one of those locational things where if you didn't grow up with it, you just don't like it? Like peanut butter, I'm told.
I dunno... We do have a lot of things with rose water or lavender here. Personally, I don't like either. It makes the food taste like perfume. But they have to be somewhat popular; they sell frequently enough.
Interesting! I'm just an insulated American going by what I've heard on various reddit forums in the past. Unfortunately I haven't had the opportunity to meet too many Europeans personally yet :)
Redditors are notoriously full of shit, though, so I shouldn't be surprised.
Tbh, though, I would understand if someone didn't like PB; some times I don't even like it if there's too much.
I'm an American and I remember liking Turkish delight as a kid. Haven't had it since then because I only had it when my dad got it for me, since he loves it, and I'd rather buy something else.
I think this is it. Most of us get the boxed Turkish delight around Christmas time, and based our views on that. Sort of like fruit cake. While I'm still not a huge fan of it, getting some freshly made instead of the shit people normally get in the sake shitty packages makes a world of a difference.
Granted, not everyone is gonna like it either way, but I've heard from a lot of people to get some of the good stuff.
My boyfriend is from the UK and I gave him authentic Turkish delight, he said he didn't like the rosewater taste.
And that reminds me of the time I reached to a bottle of water in the fridge and only realized by the 2nd "glug" that it was rosewater. It was... okay. I survived.
I must agree, those sweets differ in quality but they are mostly good, some are even great (if you are not afraid of diabetes one may get from just looking at it)
The problem is consistency. Buy some Turkish delight in Istanbul and they're ok, but some in Konya and they're the sweetest thing you'll ever eat, you cannot have them without some proper Turkish black tea.