The Experience
The Muhsinzade Han was built in 1772 on the slopes of Eminönü, close enough to the Golden Horn that its merchants could hear the boats. For two and a half centuries it served as a caravanserai — one of the Ottoman Empire's commercial inns, where caravans stopped, goods were stored, and traders conducted business in the shadow of the surrounding minarets. By the late twentieth century it had fallen into the state of neglect that claimed many of the city's most architecturally extraordinary buildings. In 2023, the GEN Group rescued it.
What they built inside is Olden 1772: a contemporary fine dining restaurant that treats the caravanserai not as a decorative backdrop but as the essential structural and philosophical premise of the entire enterprise. The sandstone arches are not cosmetic — they define the volumes that organise the dining room. The retractable glass roof is not a novelty — it is the mechanism by which a building from 1772 communicates with the Istanbul sky, allowing the minarets of the surrounding historic peninsula to enter every dinner as silent participants. When the roof opens on warm evenings, the call to prayer from Süleymaniye arrives while you are mid-course, and it is impossible to pretend you are anywhere other than exactly where you are.
Executive Chef Aykut Can Akın's seasonal tasting menu earned a place in Gault & Millau Turkey within months of opening — a recognition of seriousness that confirmed what the room's ambience already suggested. The menu is produce-driven and strictly seasonal, which at a restaurant steps from one of the world's great spice markets means an extraordinary range of Anatolian ingredients passing through the kitchen at their peak. Wild herbs, heritage grains, rare regional cheeses, the exceptional fish of the Bosphorus — these appear in combinations that are modern in technique without being detached from the Ottoman culinary territory that the building itself inhabits. The tasting menu is available at seven or eleven courses; the eleven-course version is the correct choice for the setting.
Olden 1772 is one of the few restaurants in Istanbul where the ambience score exceeds the food score and neither figure is an exaggeration. The building earns a 9.7 on its own. The food earns its 9.1 without the room's assistance. Together they produce something that cannot be experienced anywhere else in the world.
Why It Works for Solo Dining
Eating alone inside a 250-year-old Ottoman caravanserai while the minarets of Süleymaniye frame the retractable glass roof above you is one of the most complete solo dining experiences available in any city. Olden 1772 is not primarily a solo dining destination — the tasting menu works for any number — but something about arriving alone into a room of this age and intention creates a particular quality of attention. The historical weight of the architecture recalibrates whatever you were thinking about before you arrived. The food demands concentration. The service is warm but unobtrusive in a way that leaves you alone with both the building and the meal. Come here when you want to feel Istanbul's full depth rather than its contemporary surface.