Turkish Shepherd Salad known as Coban salad is made with fresh summer tomatoes, cucumbers and onions. The flavors of sumac, lemon juice and olive oil make it wonderfully tasty and refreshing. Ready in 5 minutes and disappears that fast!
It is a super easy shepherd salad recipe with a super simple Turkish salad dressing. We have this light and healthy salad as a side dish. Our favorite meals to pair with it are Homemade Turkish Meatballs and kebabs.
Shepherd Salad is one of the most popular and traditional Turkish salads. Although we have it as a side dish with anything almost everyday in summer, it is mostly known as the Turkish salad for kebabs like lamb shish kebab, Adana kebab and Turkish chicken kebab.
The combination of lemon, vinegar and the spices (sumac and red pepper flakes) results in an extremely appetizing salad. We must warn you that it makes you eat more of whatever you pair it with. We don't think you would complain about this though.
What to Eat with Turkish Shepherd Salad
Today, this salad doesn’t belong to shepherds only, everyone in the country loves it because it's super easy to make and super tasty.
It is generally served with kabobs like meatballs, chicken dishes like simple roasted chicken, or even with pilaf like our bulgur pilavı. Also, this salad is served before the main dish in restaurants to keep the customers busy with the salad while they are waiting for their order.
We love to dip a piece of bread in this salad. Although we don’t want to finish it before our kabobs arrive on the table, it’s almost impossible to stop eating it. We sometimes order a second one to accompany our main course. And there is always extra vinegar and olive oil in bottles served on the table for those who want to add more of these in their salad.
Traditionally, Turkish shepherd salad is served in an oval dish and you can garnish it with a few olives before serving.
How to Make Turkish Salad Dressing
The dressing in this salad is quite versatile. There are two main ingredients: Freshly squeezed lemon juice and olive oil. You can't think of the salad without these two.
Although the other ingredients like vinegar and pomegranate molasses are optional, you can hardly see a person refusing to use these. The amount of the ingredients for dressing depends on personal taste.
You can either add these directly on the salad or make the dressing in a bowl or jar first as in our pomegranate molasses salad dressing and pour it in the salad.
Turkish Spices for The Salad
Traditionally, sumac spice is a must in this salad, but you might see salads without any spices or dressing at some restaurants. They leave it to the customers and serve some spices and dressing ingredients on the table. You decide the amounts and add each into your salad. If you are at a kebab restaurant though, the salad is completely ready.
Sumac is a very special spice and you can use it as much as you would like. Sprinkle it over chopped onions and massage them with sumac. This removes their bitterness and gives them a nice pinkish color. We even have another salad with onion and sumac named onion salad.
If you don't mind a little heat in your salad, you should add another great spice in your salad: pul biber (red pepper flakes), which is our obsession. You can easily find these at Middle Eastern markets.
Another spice Zerrin's mom loves to use in this salad is dried mint but we think it's her personal creation. We use it when we don't have fresh parsley on hand and love the taste, but it's totally optional.
What is The Origin?
The original names of dishes are as important as their flavors, so let's start with a brief explanation on the local name of the chopped Turkish salad.
This salad used to be the main dish of shepherds in Turkey, so it is called Çoban Salata, meaning shepherd's salad.
In the past, a village had generally one shepherd and everyone entrusted their cattle to him. People in that village would give shepherds some foods they produced in return. These might be wheat, flour, vegetables, fruits, molasses, dairy products, etc. Although there are still people who pay their shepherds with such foods, paying money is more common today.
A shepherd hits the trail early in the morning and takes a bundle of food with him that includes tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers and onions (the basic ingredients of shepherd’s salad) and a little bread.
All of these vegetables are grown in the village yard and the bread is of course made by the women of that village. He prepares a quick lunch with these. Maybe some cheese or olives accompany this easy chopped Turkish salad but nothing more.
More Turkish Salad Recipes
- Roasted Onion Salad
- Piyaz Salad
- Sumac Onions
- Patlican Salatasi (Eggplant Salad)
- Acili Ezme
- Olive Salad
- Turkish Bulgur Salad
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📖 Recipe
Turkish Shepherd Salad
A refreshing and tasty salad with just a handful of ingredients. Ready in 5 minutes!
- Prep Time: 5 minutes
- Total Time: 5 minutes
- Yield: 4 1x
- Category: Salad
- Cuisine: Turkish
Ingredients
- 1 cup chopped tomatoes
- ¼ cup chopped cucumber
- 2 green peppers, chopped
- 1 big onion, diced
- Half bunch of parsley
- 2 teaspoons sumac
- Olives to garnish, optional
Dressing:
- 1 lemon
- 1 tbsp vinegar
- 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- 1 teaspoon pomegranate molasses, optional
- ½ teaspoon red pepper flakes
- Salt to taste
Instructions
- Put the chopped vegetables in a bowl. Dice the onion in the same way, but before adding them in the bowl, massage them with sumac.
- Chop parsley and mix all of them.
- To prepare the dressing, whisk together the lemon juice, vinegar, olive oil, pomegranate molasses, red pepper flakes and salt. Pour it over the salad and give it a good stir. Serve immediately.
Nutrition
- Serving Size: 4
- Calories:
- Sugar:
- Sodium:
- Fat:
- Saturated Fat:
- Trans Fat:
- Carbohydrates:
- Fiber:
- Protein:
- Cholesterol:
YM says
Regarding green peppers. Are they Sweet Bell peppers or spicy jalapeño peppers ?
Zerrin says
Well, no strict rule on this. You can use either or both.
restaurantthatdeliversnearme.website says
Thanks for the info on turkish salad.
JB says
Not a fan of leaf-style salads; this one is easy, tasty and my new favorite thing!
Zerrin says
So happy to hear that you love this salad! You know what? We have it at breakfast as well, especially at the weekends. It is even better with summer produce.
Donnah says
Such a refreshing and scrumptious salad with simple ingredients. I topped it with some feta. YUM! This has become my favorite light lunch so far. Thanks for the recipe!
Clara says
I am so excited. Fixed this tonight and even my finicky son ate it. I had been trying to find a recipe for this that actually had some flavor. It seems that some Turkish eat this very bland. Had tasted this at a local restaurant and it was so flavorful. Never even heard of sumac--don't know where to find it yet, but, even without it I was able to arrive at a very close version of the salad I have so been craving ever since that Valentine Dinner. (found that lemon zest and sea salt are concidered a substitute) Do remember the amazing flavor of the spice sprinkled along the edge of the plate being something I would definitely search for--hoping that is sumac! Thanks for sharing! Can't wait to try some more!
Jason Wong says
Looks similar to the Shopska Salad by the Bulgarians. Will be back for more....
Anny says
Hi Zerrin,
I came across your blog as I was researching about Shepperd Salad. I made this salad based on Sunny Anderson's (Food Network) recipe last week, and now I am working on my post about it. I usually try to find out the story/origin of the food so I can write about it, and through google, I found your blog and the story of this salad. Thank you for sharing the story, and unknowingly to me, I now know and made two of the Turkish/Middle Eastern dishes. The other one is Circassian salad, which I found through Simply Recipes blog, and I love that chicken salad.
Again, thanks for sharing the story and nice meeting you 🙂
Amanda says
interesting story! and the salad looks great 🙂
dokuzuncubulut says
Merhabalar,
Yaz geldi mi soframızın olmazsa olmaz salatasıdır. Ne güzel anlatmışsın. Ellerine sağlık.. Güzel yorumun için de teşekkürler. Yorumlarımda sorun vardı site adreslerini göremediğim için ulaşamıyordum. Onun için cevaplamada geç kaldım. Sevgiler. Sağlıklı mutlu iyi yıllar dilerim...
Hillary says
This does look great and healthy! Thanks for sharing!
Mely says
This is why I am a subscriber of your blog. Always healthy good looking salads and my husband loves everything I had cooked for him from your recipes. And now you had me looking for SUMAC!! Thanks for teaching me something new.
Have a great week!
Erkin says
It reminds me of RAKI(as long as the ingredients are fresh and from the uncle shepherd's garden)!!!!
Daily Spud says
Recipes mean so much more when we have the story behind the origin of the dish. As for the salad, I now have another use for the sumac that I finally managed to get hold of 🙂
Gera @ SweetsFoods says
What a colorful and flavorful salad Zerrin!
So perfect for summery days.
Love all the Turkish customs well explained by you!
Now go to twitter with it 🙂
Cheers!
Gera
Diana says
This is one of my favorite salads. So tasty.
lk says
I agree that this looks a lot like Greek salad, which is one of my all-time favorites. Looks great! I really should get some sumac.