Kebab Moskhari is the beef version of the Greek grilled kebab, moskhari meaning beef (specifically veal-grade young beef in Greek usage). The angle is the meat itself. Where many Greek street kebabs lean on pork or a pork-beef blend, this one commits to beef alone, which changes the seasoning logic, the fat behavior on the coals, and how forgiving the skewer is if the cook gets distracted.
The make is the standard ground-and-shaped kebab applied to beef. The meat is minced, worked with grated onion, herbs, and spice until it is tacky enough to cling to the skewer without falling off, then shaped into a long finger or flattened length and grilled over charcoal. Beef runs leaner and firmer than pork, so the seasoning usually carries more cumin and onion to keep it from tasting flat, and the grilling window is tighter. Good execution gets a hard savoury char on the outside while the inside stays juicy and just cooked through, with the mince worked enough to hold but not so hard it turns dense and bouncy. Sloppy work is easy to spot here: beef punishes overcooking faster than pork, so a skewer left too long goes grey and dry in the middle, and under-worked mince crumbles off the skewer into the coals before it is done.
How it shifts depends on format and the counter's habits. The same beef kebab goes into a pita with tomato, onion, fries, and tzatziki, or onto a plate as a merida with the sides alongside. Some shops blend the beef with a little lamb or pork fat to keep it from drying, which is a defensible move but moves it away from the strict beef version. The wrapped and plated formats are their own builds and each deserves its own article rather than being crowded in here. What moskhari reliably contributes is a leaner, beefier, more assertively spiced skewer, where the whole quality question is whether the cook respected how little margin beef gives before it dries out.