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#17 in Istanbul — One Michelin Star — Kadıköy

Araf İstanbul

Kadıköy — Istanbul, Turkey Contemporary Turkish $$$

The newest addition to Istanbul’s Michelin constellation — Chefs Kenan Çetinkaya and Pınar Korgan Çetinkaya’s innovative take on Turkish cuisine earns attention from the first plate.

Photo via Araf İstanbul · Google
Restaurant #17 in Istanbul — One Michelin Star — Kadıköy dining room
9.2
Food
8.7
Ambience
8.1
Value

The Experience

Araf occupies a small, deliberately modest space in Kadıköy — Istanbul's Asian-side neighbourhood of covered markets, fish shops, and a food culture that has always operated at a confident remove from the European shore's fine-dining theatre. The room seats roughly twelve people. Most sit at the counter, which faces an open fire that Kenan Çetinkaya tends with the focused attention of someone who has decided that everything worth cooking should pass through flame. The rest sit in a small conservatory extension, close enough to watch the kitchen work. Neither arrangement is accidental.

Kenan and Pınar Korgan Çetinkaya opened Araf as a deliberate statement: that a serious tasting menu restaurant did not need a Bosphorus view, a celebrity address, or a hotel lobby. What it needed was a fire, a counter, and enough discipline to let the cooking speak without theatrical distraction. The Michelin inspectors who awarded the restaurant its star in the 2026 Guide Türkiye agreed without qualification. The citation described cooking that prioritises taste, ingredient quality, and technique — and in a city accumulating Michelin recognition faster than any other in the region, that is a meaningful endorsement.

The tasting menu rotates constantly, written around what arrives from Çetinkaya's network of Turkish producers: mountain herbs from the Black Sea coast, Aegean olive oils, cured fish, valley vegetables that exist at the edge of commercial viability. The fire gives dishes a structural character that distinguishes Araf from cleaner, more European-toned contemporaries — there is a singed note, a roughness at the edges, that grounds the cooking unmistakably in Turkish soil. The wine list is concise and considered, with emphasis on Anatolian producers working at a comparable level of seriousness.

The word "araf" translates from Arabic as the border between worlds — the threshold between paradise and purgatory in Islamic cosmology, the place of waiting, of in-between. As a name for a restaurant that sits between tradition and invention, between Istanbul's two shores, between the expected and the surprising, it is chosen with precision. A dinner here occupies exactly that territory, and it is more interesting for it.

Why It Works for Birthday

A birthday dinner at Araf is not for everyone. There are no panoramic views, no birthday terrace, no theatrical procession of staff bearing candles through a crowded room. What the counter restaurant delivers instead is something genuinely rarer: a private experience shared with the people you brought, around a fire, watching two chefs cook entirely for you. The format means attention is undivided. Twelve seats means the room never becomes a restaurant in the conventional sense — it remains an event. For the kind of birthday guest who eats seriously and finds spectacle beside the point, Araf is the most considered table in Istanbul. Book at least six weeks ahead; availability is sharply limited and the restaurant does not keep a long waitlist. Confirm via arafistanbul.com or direct message on reservation platforms.

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