P.N. – “When Turkish girls are old enough to make a good Turkish coffee, a joke is made in the family that they are now ready to be married off.”
What happens during a traditional Turkish engagement ceremony?
P.N. – “In the actual engagement ceremony, the groom’s family sits in the living room while the bride’s family stays in the kitchen, making and preparing the food of the day. The bride is not to sit down with the groom’s family until the end of the ceremony, because the bride is supposed to be all up, being the working woman, and that kind of stuff.”
“But, at the very end, after all the pastries are eaten and the tea is drank, you always end the ceremony with coffee. So the bride goes in to the kitchen to prepare the coffee, and she has to carry the coffee one by one to each of the family members present, and the most important one she has to hand the coffee to is the groom. That always happens. She is carrying the coffee to her future husband, whether or not that is what is desired or anything.”
“If she spills any coffee onto the saucer, it’s gonna be a failed marriage, and they blame her for it.”
“That’s the whole thing; whenever I’m carrying Turkish coffee, (I used to have really shaky hands) I’d always spill it when I was younger, and my mom would always tell me I’d have bad luck.”
This particular story struck me as odd, because I could tell how conflicted the person was while she was talking. She, an extremely powerful woman, clearly doesn’t love this custom, as it’s implicit biases against women both in Turkey in general and during the wedding specifically are clear.