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Downtown's Europa dishes up Armenian delights

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  • Downtown's Europa dishes up Armenian delights

    The Honolulu Advertiser
    Friday, August 5, 2005
    http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.d ll/article?AID=/20050805/ENT04/508050317/1131/ENT

    Downtown's Europa dishes up Armenian delights
    By Helen Wu
    Advertiser Restaurant Critic

    Frank and Margarit Lavoie, owners of Kafe Europa, offer
    Armenian/Russian style food with homemade pastries baked by
    Margarit. Her mother, Kara Mnatsakanyan, right, helps make the daily
    specials. Photos by DEBORAH BOOKER | The Honolulu Advertiser

    KAFE EUROPA
    Rating: 3 1/2 forks

    Tardus Financial Plaza
    801 Alakea St., No. 101, at Queen Street
    230-9941
    Summer hours: 7 a.m.-4:30 p.m. weekdays
    Starting in September, also open 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturdays

    Clockwise from top left: raspberry-almond tart, Armenian style baklava,
    homemade cream puff, okra appetizer and fava-bean salad.

    One midsummer evening in Manhattan, a friend and I swooned as our
    waiter, Moon, and the rest of the staff at the famed Russian Samovar
    restaurant treated us like czarinas. Under the rosy glow of red
    lanterns, they covered our table with dishes of basturma (Armenian
    dried beef); a royal Baltic fish platter of smoked salmon and sturgeon,
    salmon caviar and herring accompanied by plate-sized blini; steaming
    cabbage-stuffed pirozhok (savory turnover) and cold borscht.

    Vodkas flavored in-house with pear, plum and ginger had us wanting
    to try every single one. Russian tea sweetened with cherry preserves
    provided a warm and deeply satisfying end to the meal just as the
    live music reached a dramatic crescendo.

    And thanks to a tip from a reader named Neal suggesting that I check
    out a place called Kafe Europa, I'm not going into complete withdrawal
    back on home ground. This downtown spot is a grab-n-go coffee stand
    unlike the usual sit-down eateries I go to, but it has the basics that
    help get me through any hard day - good coffee, sweet pastries and
    hearty food. It's comparable to one of those quality quickie places
    that are in most big cities but rare here, and I'm not talking about
    okazuyas, lunch wagons or Korean plate-lunch joints.

    Kafe Europa has a decidedly unique feel, probably because owners
    Margarit and Frank Lavoie aren't from these parts. Margarit, from
    Armenia, and Frank, originally a Bostonian, met when Frank was a
    Peace Corps volunteer in Armenia. After visiting Frank's brother,
    who was stationed at Kane'ohe Bay, they traded Boston's winters for
    Hawai'i's eternal summers. Without any background in the restaurant
    business, they are now serving a small selection of homemade Eastern
    European foods and tempting desserts to the downtown business crowd.

    I asked Margarit how she would describe Armenian food, and she
    answered, "It is very close to Greek and Mediterranean food, and
    because Armenia was part of the Soviet Union we had an influence
    from Russia."

    You'll find an assortment of seemingly eclectic items on Kafe
    Europa's menu.

    On softly warmed pita bread you can get filling sandwiches of beef
    kebab ($5.50), vegetarian roasted eggplant with feta ($4.99), or
    tender, roasted Australian free range lamb ($6.25). Norwegian smoked
    salmon ($5.95 including side salad) on a freshly baked croissant is
    another alternative. If this is all too foreign, choose a standard
    ham or turkey with melted provolone cheese ($5.25, with side salad)
    on a croissant.

    But it's the uncommon dishes that attract me. Daily special plates
    include a free can of soda and a salad, and most arrive with basmati
    rice - a nice change from the usual sticky kind. Tuesday's Uzbeki
    pilaf ($6.50) comes with hummus and pita bread. This saffron rice
    studded with lamb morsels is faintly sweet with carrots. Russian beef
    stroganoff ($6.95), moist beef strips baked in a rich sour cream sauce,
    is a sell-out favorite on Wednesday for those tired of beef stew.

    As for the soup of the day ($4.25; $6.50 with mini-salad and bread
    slice), I've tried borscht, chicken-mushroom and a pinto bean. None of
    them left me hungry, although I wished they were hotter. I usually eye
    the deli case for cold appetizers ($3 to $4.50) that come pre-packed
    in 8-ounce plastic tubs.

    These meze-type snacks such as baba gannouj, lentil salad and
    beet salad are almost meals in themselves, and a great option for
    vegetarians.

    Another treat is cold-pressed, preservative-free Noyan brand
    juices from Armenia ($1.99 small, $2.49 medium, $2.99 large,
    $4.99 carton; natural pomegranate without added sugar is $2.50,
    $3, $3.50, $6.50). Two flavors I've never encountered before are
    sea-buckthorn that tastes like a zingy, anti-oxidant, power-packed
    passion-orange-guava and a refreshingly tart, vitamin C-loaded
    Cornelian cherry that resembles a guava concoction.

    Kafe Europa's family recipes extend to its sweets. Although Margarit's
    mother, Kara, assists behind the counter and with some of the cooking,
    Margarit does all the baking, which she learned from her grandmother.

    Every day, she turns out light-as-a feather pastries that practically
    float away as customers come in requesting baklava ($2), napoleons
    ($2) and tiramisu ($2.50). Occasionally, there are delicate cream
    puffs ($2) with a hazelnut glaze that caused me to have a temporary
    memory loss about Beard-who and Coco-what. Illy-brand espresso drinks
    alone or combined with a pastry can jump-start those suffering from
    sluggishness.

    Despite not having any tables or parking, Kafe Europa does have
    lunchtime lines. Around noon, it's practically impossible to find a
    seat in the Tardus Financial building with the competition from all
    the other eateries.

    However, Kafe Europa's reasonably priced, homey food, along with
    Frank and Margarit's genuine, old-world hospitality, work like an
    Eastern European charm to keep regulars returning.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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