The Passage That Istanbul Keeps to Itself
Sofyalı Sokak has been a street of convivial drinking since the Ottoman Empire's last decades, a narrow passage of Beyoğlu that still smells of tobacco and mystery on a Thursday night. Arpa Bar occupies a ground-floor space in one of its 19th-century apartment blocks — exposed brick, low ceilings, candles burning down to their last half-inch — and has become, quietly and without any Instagram fanfare, the city's most beloved date-night destination among those who know where to look.
The name means "barley" in Turkish. It is an understated choice that speaks to the bar's philosophy: working with raw ingredients, respecting fermentation, trusting the process. Barı Yıldız, who opened Arpa in 2019 after stints at cocktail institutions in Copenhagen and London, built the menu around a cellar of Turkish spirits — rakı, Turkish gin distilled with mastic and saffron, pomace spirits from Aegean vineyards — supplemented by house-made Ottoman botanical infusions that take up to three weeks to prepare.
The room seats forty, and it rarely seats more than thirty at any given time. Reservations fill on weekends by Tuesday. The lighting is considered — amber candlelight against stone walls, the kind of illumination that makes every face look like a Rembrandt portrait. There is a six-seat bar counter where walk-ins sometimes find space, and where the head bartender will talk through the menu in the earnest, unhurried manner of someone who has prepared for this conversation all day.
Background music is considered with the same care as the lighting — soul and jazz from the 1960s, turned low enough that conversation remains the centrepiece. There are no televisions. There is no DJ. There is no trivia night. Arpa is, in the best possible sense, a bar for sitting still and paying attention to each other.
Ottoman Botanicals, Modern Execution
Yıldız divides the menu into four chapters: Mastic & Resin, Saffron & Stone Fruit, Smoke & Pomace, and A Few Classics We Respect. The first two chapters are where Arpa becomes singular. Turkish mastic — the resin harvested from Pistacia lentiscus trees on the island of Chios — appears in a clarified milk punch that is simultaneously ancient and radical. Saffron from Safranbolu, the most expensive spice in Turkey's growing repertoire, is slow-infused into local gin at a ratio that costs more per bottle than most bars spend on their entire backbar.
The pomace chapter honours Türk rakısı, served long with cold water and ice in the traditional manner, but also appears in riffs — a rakı-washed clarified negroni, a pomace old fashioned with dried fig and bitter orange peel. The Classics chapter is smaller and more curated: a daiquiri, a dry martini, a Manhattan, each made with unusual but correct technique that reminds you why these drinks survived a century and a half of fashion cycles. The bar also maintains a small selection of natural Turkish wines and imported amari for those who arrive for dinner at one of Beyoğlu's restaurants and want to extend the evening without more spirits.
Arpa's commitment to Istanbul's independent bar scene extends beyond its own four walls. Yıldız consults for several of the neighbourhood's newer openings and has made a practice of featuring Turkish craft producers — local tonic water from a small operation in Ankara, house-made ferments that collaborate with a cheesemaker in Urla. The approach is less farm-to-table doctrine and more genuine curiosity about what this country can produce when given attention and intention.
For Istanbul visitors seeking an alternative to the rooftop-bar circuit — the 360 Istanbul experience, beautiful as it is — Arpa offers something that cities three times its price cannot easily replicate: intimacy, craft, and the particular warmth of a room where the bartender remembers your name by the second round. Book ahead. Dress as though the evening matters. It will.
Four Drinks That Define Arpa
Chios mastic-infused gin, Tokay grape must, clarified with whole milk for three days. Silky, resinous, and unlike anything else on the Istanbul bar scene. Served chilled, no ice.
Safranbolu saffron gin, fresh lemon, egg white, orange blossom water. A golden drink that earns its colour. One of the most photographed drinks in Beyoğlu — though the rule here is phones away after the first sip.
Rakı-washed London dry gin, house-made bitter orange vermouth, Campari, dried fig peel. The anise of the rakı wash lifts the bitter of the Campari into something genuinely new.
Describe your mood, your last meal, or your ideal evening. The bar team builds something for you from the seasonal cellar. This is how regulars drink here. Trust them entirely.
Istanbul & Beyond
Arpa sits in Beyoğlu's finest drinking corridor. Explore all Istanbul bars or venture further — Door 74 in Amsterdam shares Arpa's ethos of small-batch, reservation-only excellence. Operation Dagger in Singapore pushes the no-menu, trust-the-bartender format further than almost anywhere else. For date-night bars in a similar spirit, see our date night category or visit Bellboy Bar in Tel Aviv, another neighbourhood hidden gem worth booking ahead.