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  • Chefs spice up food tours

    Chefs spice up food tours
    By Clare Leschin-Hoar | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor

    Christian Science Monitor
    April 19 2005

    WATERTOWN, MASS. - Moving through the tightly packed Sevan's Bakery
    here in Watertown - home to a large Armenian population - chef
    Ana Sortun holds up a small bag of dried mint, explaining its many
    uses - such as sprinkling on just-roasted meats, or folding it into
    thick, creamy Middle Eastern yogurt, commonly used in a variety of
    Mediterranean dishes.

    The tour group soaks up every word uttered by Ms. Sortun, nominated
    for a James Beard Award. They move as a pack as she steps deeper into
    the store, past the displays of olives, dried fruits, and nuts, and
    into the bakery's stainless steel kitchen, where they sample three
    varieties of feta cheeses - French, Bulgarian, and the newly arrived
    Turkish feta, all with slightly different tastes and textures.

    Margaret Chavushian, the bakery's owner, swings through the door with
    a tray of soft mounds of red lentil kofte. Hard bagel-like breads and
    flat crackers with spread Za'atar - a dry mixture of summer savory and
    sesame seeds - are passed hand to hand. Murmurs and nods of approval
    travel through the group. Quickly, the tray is bare and smiles abound.

    This Saturday morning lesson in yufka pastry, lamejun, kibbeh,
    and haloumi cheese is an example of the latest way for chefs to
    connect with clientele clamoring to get up close and personal. Unlike
    traditional walking tours, which are often led-to-a-chef, Sortun's
    version is chef-led.

    Moving out of the kitchen and back into the shop, Sortun, who is of
    Norwegian descent, stops at the display of frozen goods and points out
    a number of delights such as Egyptian mantee - tiny baked ravioli-style
    dumplings that are traditionally cooked in chicken broth; boxes of
    lamejun - delicious pizzalike snacks that can be warmed in the oven
    or on a griddle; and yufka pastry, which can be wrapped around cheese
    and then fried.

    Serious about her passion for Middle Eastern food, Sortun, chef-owner
    of the award-winning Oleana Restaurant in Cambridge, Mass., exudes
    both confidence in her knowledge of this cuisine and appreciation
    for the goods displayed in this tiny corner market.

    "I think sometimes there's a curiosity that people have about how
    chefs find their ingredients," says Sortun. "People think there's
    some kind of secret, when really, we're shopping the same way [as
    home cooks]. We're just looking for something that inspires us,
    that looks good that day.

    "For me, Watertown is really a special place," she adds. "I can't
    get the ingredients they have there anywhere else. I can't find the
    labne or the yufka pastry at a lot of different places, so I rely on
    them for the kind of food I use [in the restaurant]."

    The students file out of Sevan's and cross the street to Arax Market,
    a Lebanese and Armenian grocer, where the sights and smells change
    dramatically.

    An earthy, sweet aroma prevails, wafting from the piles of fresh
    produce displayed in cardboard boxes stacked on the floor. To one
    side is a wall filled with clear bags of exotic spices, to the other
    side are open bins of pickled vegetables and cured olives.

    In the back corner of Arax are piles of flour, grains, rice, lentils,
    and couscous, shelved near stacks of immense pita breads, which are
    routinely prodded and tested for freshness by the store's regulars.

    "It was very exotic," says Marcy Rizzo of Newton, Mass., one of those
    on the tour. "You really felt like you were in a different country
    when you walked into those stores. [The place] wasn't Americanized -
    the way of displaying things, the quality, the smells, the colors;
    [or] how things like brilliant pink pickled turnips and crushed red
    pepper paste are used in everyday cooking."

    Sortun deftly moves around the store fielding questions from the group
    about items such as tiny bundles of dried purple eggplant that are
    bound with thick rubber bands. She explains how to use fresh dates,
    which are hard and light yellow - with little resemblance to their
    dried, sticky, brown cousins - by slicing them very thinly and using
    them atop salads.

    She draws out two types of skewers and explains the difference to the
    group: The round shish are used for cubes of meat and vegetables. The
    flat shish are for ground meat. "They make it by kneading the beef
    or lamb until the meat becomes creamy and binds itself. This is like
    their meatball," says Sortun.

    The next stop on the morning tour is Massis Bakery, which feels like
    a cross between Sevan's and Arax. Here the group is treated to warm
    samples of kibbeh. Since the store has many similar ingredients to
    the first two, the time spent here is short.

    Sortun then herds the tour across another street to Town Shawarma,
    a halal meat market, where samples of grilled sujuk (a special
    spiced meat mixture, similar to sausage) and a salty yogurt drink
    are served. The owner, Magid Alhussein, is amiable, and brings out
    the samples as soon as he sees Sortun walk through the door.

    Sortun ends the tour at a small local restaurant, where, among platters
    of falafel and dainty dishes of humus, her clients chatter about this
    unusual peek at an often overlooked ethnic neighborhood.
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