Tat Restaurant

Selçuk


Touristy Tat's food won't set the world on fire – although the güveç (stew) and other fiercely sizzling dishes could start a blaze. But it is a pleasant spot with seating on a pedestrianised walkway. The menu takes in kebaps, seafood and seven types of meze including fried zucchini and hummus.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Selçuk attractions

1. Roman & Byzantine Aqueduct

0.03 MILES

Running eastward from the southern base of Ayasuluk Hill, the remains of this long and quite tall Roman and Byzantine aqueduct are festively adorned with…

2. Ephesus Museum

0.21 MILES

An essential stop on every Ephesus itinerary, this small museum contains artefacts from the ancient city, including scales, jewellery and cosmetic boxes…

3. Basilica of St John

0.22 MILES

Despite a century of restoration, the once-great basilica built by Byzantine Emperor Justinian (r 527–565) remains a skeleton of its former self…

4. İsa Bey Camii

0.3 MILES

At the southern base of Ayasuluk Hill, this imposing mosque was built in a post-Seljuk/pre-Ottoman transitional style, when Selçuk was capital of the…

5. Ayasuluk Fortress

0.37 MILES

Selçuk’s crowning achievement is accessed on the same ticket as the Basilica of St John, once the citadel's principal structure. Earlier and extensive…

6. Temple of Artemis

0.38 MILES

In an empty field to the west of the centre, this lone reconstructed pillar is all that remains of the massive Temple of Artemis (or Artemision), built…

7. Grotto of the Seven Sleepers

0.94 MILES

The road to/from Ephesus' Lower Gate passes this cave tomb on Panayır Dağı (Mt Pion), where seven young legendary Christians, persecuted by Emperor Decius…

8. Sanctuary of the Mother Goddess Cybele

1.2 MILES

Excavations on the northern slope of Panayır Dağı (Mt Pion) overlooking the so-called Grotto of the Seven Sleepers have revealed stelae or sepulchral…