The house shop. A bit dirty. I'm used to clean shops. There is as much as possible. There's a problem with vegetables. There is practically nothing. Perhaps because we went only in the evening. You won't find any variety in milk either. Well, we'll either intercept something. And yes, there is no alcohol. I did not know. Bread is running out. The tourist service is consumer-oriented, I looked at how much it costs, and I gave exactly 145 lira. They look at me and show me the money, like I'm missing what you gave me. I show you that you have 145 on your hands, according to your price tags. Misunderstanding again. Apparently, something else is breaking through at the checkout or the cashier has been interrupted. In general, he opened a second cash register and began to serve the Turks, but left me at a loss.
I began to resent that he was ignoring me. Well, I paid it off in a straight line. He has half a lira left to give him change. After I protested, he came back to me and hit back, throwing it on my table. I'm a little freaked out by this attitude. In general, don't be fooled by their lack of understanding about money. They like to fool tourists. Count, write, or better yet, photograph everything.
We did that in a cafe. After all the actions, we were counted correctly.
When I visit Istanbul, I try to buy groceries in Migros. A wide selection, a large network and relatively liberal prices. Fruits, vegetables, drinks, meat are quite affordable.
An inexpensive supermarket with groceries.The store area is small and the selection is small.
It was located near our hotel, where only breakfast was included, so we bought snacks here.