TRAVEL ..... Bread-time Story
Armenia is a mind-boggling
array of grilled meats, flavour-charged dishes and fresh salads, with ovenwarm
flatbreads at the heart of its gastronomy
Succulent shashliks grilled
to a gossamer gold, auberginesand tomato-stuffed Bo rani (fried chicken)
bursting with flavour, baked vegetables saturated with the smell of coals,
khorovats (barbecued meats) dripping golden juices, kyuftas (meat balls) that
melt in the mouth, brine-rip ened cheeses, dolma (stuffed grape leaves)
brimming with meaty goodness... A happy embrace of different cultures -Turkish,
Iranian, Russian, Arabic means Armenia is also rich and diverse.
Centuries before Turkish or
Soviet intru sions, the south Caucasian country of three million people was on
a key Silk Road route that led to cross-cultural influ ences, resulting in a
mind-boggling array of grilled meats, flavour-charged dishes, fresh salads and
oven-warm flatbreads.
As I travelled across the
pint-sized country -peppered with valleys, gorges, lakes -the diversity of its
food (cereals, lentils, vegetables, fruits) nurtured on mountainous terrain
characterised by multiple distinct microclimates -was a treat to savour.
Bread lies at the heart of
Armenian gas tronomy. At the Trinity Canyon Vineyards in Vayots Dzor, in
south-eastern Armenia, we were invited for wine tasting and a tonir-lavash
baking ceremony where we get to watch the village baker make the Armenian
flatbread in the tonir (clay oven). First, a wheat flour and water dough is
prepared and laid across a rabata (hay-filled cushion) to stretch.After a
while, one portion of the now-pliable dough is pulled out and rolled thin (to
about two feet) till it becomes translucent.Plunging her torso, the baker
quickly plants the rolled dough into the hot oven, smacking it against the
glowing oven wall. Almost immediately, the lavash begins to crackle and crisp.
When it starts blistering, the bread is removed with an iron rod and stacked in
a tray. Lavash, explained our host Hovakim Saghatelyan, owner of Trinity
Canyon, a 4.5-hectare organic vineyard that combines contemporary oenology with
Armenian traditions, “is one of the oldest breads in the world“. The way it is
crafted features on UNESCO's Representative List Of The Intangible Cultural
Heritage Of Humanity; There's leavened or unleavened lavash, thick or thin,
soft or crisp.
Different villages have
their own fiercely-guarded recipes. Lavash bak ing can also be a communitarian
exer cise with ladies preparing large batch es to store them for the punishing
win ter months. The bread remains unspoilt for over a year. Just sprinkle some
water over it, heat it and its as good as new. As the baker brings the tray
load of lavash to our table -set amidst vineyards overlooking magnificent
mountain landscapes -our feast begins.We wrap the bread around khorovats (pork
meat), stuff salty cheese and spicy peppers into it and top it all with thick
creamy curds called matzun. It was a delicious mess. And use of cutlery was
eschewed. Lavash was our napkin, plate, spoon, serving bowl, all rolled into
one!
Meat Treat
Meat dishes occupy a cult
status in Armenia. Shashlik comes at the top of the carnivore's pyramid cooked
the same it was 1,500 years ago. I try out at least a dozen varieties in
restaurants and people's homes. The reason why Armenian shashlik is so
delicious; a local chef tells me conspiratorially, is because before we
marinate the meat in cognac or wine to tenderise the protein. There's prolific
use of herbs and condiments as well. We use over 300 kinds of wild grasses and
flowers as seasonings, a local grocer tells me as I survey his smorgasbord of
peppers, coriander, fenugreek, black pepper, mint, tarragon, basil, thyme,
cinnamon, cardamom, clove, saffron, vanilla and a gazillion other spices and
aromats.
Armenia is also fruit
country and apricot is the national fruit. The fleshy fruit is mashed to make
jellies, jams, marmalades, boiled and distilled into compote (a clear fruit
juice), stewed with lamb or chicken or steeped in pilafs and stuffed in meats.
Story goes that in the first century BC, Roman general Lucullus took several
apricot saplings from Armenia to Rome.The Romans planted those saplings in
their city and eureka, the “Armenian plum“ was born! At the ancient
monasteries, the sight of women selling garlands of dried fruits (churchkela)
hanging like curtains from their makeshift stalls is ubiquitous. They also sell
sweet Sujuk, a chewy nougat made from honey, nuts and fruits as well as gata, a
sweet pie studded with slivers of almonds. Armenian rivers and lakes brim with
fish which chefs proudly put on their menus. Trout bred and caught in Lake Sevan
(the largest water body in the Caucasus region) is called ishkhan and is
particularly prized. At a local restaurant, I try the fish to find out what the
fuss is all about. The fish is cooked simply, on a grill with a smidgen of
olive oil and rock salt. But it was to die for!
Neeta
lal
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ETM27AUG17
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