Taylor Rains/Business Insider
- Skytrax named Turkish Airlines as Europe's best in business class and catering for 2025.
- I flew 10 hours in premium on a Turkish Boeing 787 to see how the seat and food measured up.
- The seat didn't have a door, but it did have a 'flying chef' that made the experience a lot fancier.
You don't usually expect restaurant-style service at 35,000 feet — but Turkish Airlines still staffs a 'flying chef' in business class on its longest routes.
These rare culinary specialists, who are separate from flight attendants, take food orders, plate meals in the galley, and oversee premium service on long-haul flights.
The role is designed to make dining feel closer to a restaurant than standard airline catering — but chefs don't actually cook from scratch due to flight safety rules. They use ovens to heat and finish pre-prepared meals and then arrange the presentation.
These chefs also take customer feedback from the air to help improve and develop meals in catering kitchens on the ground.
I recently experienced the unique service on a 10-hour flight from Istanbul to New York in January. Considering Turkish won Skytrax's 2025 awards for Europe's best business class and best business class catering, I was eager to see how the seat and food measured up.
I strategically chose the Boeing 787 for its modern business cabin; the Boeing 777 that also flies the route doesn't have the nicer design.
Between the lie-flat seat, the large TV, and the restaurant-style meals, the cabin felt like my living room on a lazy Saturday night.
I slept well and appreciated the wide variety of food, from poached eggs and swordfish to a trolley full of savory appetizers.
Here's what the full experience was like. Business Insider paid a media rate for the business class upgrade to New York.