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A match made in Yerevan

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  • A match made in Yerevan

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    July 27 2005

    A match made in Yerevan
    An Armenian brandy and the perfect almond kataif -- you'd think you
    were in the Caucasus.

    By Charles Perry, Times Staff Writer


    I first had Armenian brandy in a remote burg in northeast Uzbekistan.
    We sat around the breakfast table eating steamed Uzbek sweet potato
    dumplings and drinking Armenian brandy while watching "Casper, the
    Friendly Ghost," dubbed in Russian.

    The family I was staying with seemed to think breakfast was a little
    early for brandy, but my host was simply breaking out the good stuff
    for the guest, as Central Asian etiquette demands. Armenian brandy is
    highly regarded in the countries of the old Soviet empire, above all
    in Russia and Ukraine, which between them import millions of bottles
    a month.

    I was pretty sure Uzbek sweet potato mantu are not the ideal match
    for Armenian brandy. But the issue remained academic until recently,
    when I discovered a huge selection of Armenian brandies at Mission
    Liquor in Pasadena. Because Southern California has a sizable
    Armenian population, Mission stocks about two dozen versions, from
    3-year-olds at about $9 to rarities more than 30 years old in the $90
    price range.

    Another benefit of having such a large Armenian colony is that we
    have top-notch Armenian bakeries. Putting the two sources together, I
    tasted a variety of brandies and pastries and found a particularly
    delicious combination: a 25-year-old brandy called Mesrob Mashtots
    paired with the excellent almond kataif from Sarkis Pastry in
    Glendale. The buttery, crunchy pastry has the toasted flavors to
    flatter an oak-aged spirit, and its plush almond center makes a
    particularly agreeable background for this smooth, ethereal but
    mouthfilling brandy, with its magisterial notes of smoke, licorice,
    dried fruit and wild herbs.



    Out of Arax

    Most Armenian brandy is made in the agricultural heart of the
    Republic of Armenia, the Arax Valley, which Armenia shares
    (reluctantly) with its neighbors Turkey, Iran and Azerbaijan. It's
    distilled from local grape varieties such as Garan Damak, Kangu and
    Voskehat - not surprisingly, since it was somewhere in the Caucasus
    that winemaking originated, as the story of Noah suggests. Armenia
    also makes wine from its local grape varieties, but neighboring
    Georgia is better known for wine.

    Whether because of the grapes or the Krasnodar oak barrels used for
    aging, Armenian brandies tend to be light and elegant, but you
    wouldn't mistake them for French brandy. In place of the honey,
    caramel and floral qualities of Cognac, their flavors often seem to
    include toasted nut and exotic fruit notes. In the mouth, they tend
    to a suave, papery dryness.

    For decades, all the distillers had to sell whatever they made to the
    Yerevan Brandy Co., which marketed under the brand name Ararat. After
    the Soviet collapse, the French liquor giant Pernod-Ricard bought the
    118-year-old Yerevan/Ararat brand and started upgrading the
    operation.

    In the meanwhile, some of the small distillers have started marketing
    brandy themselves. The French connection with Armenian brandy goes
    beyond Ararat, by the way - Armenian distilleries send some of their
    grandest brandies in cask to France, to be put in rather floridly
    shaped bottles, like giant perfume bottles, because Armenia lacks the
    facilities to do so. From there they are shipped to Armenian
    communities around the world.

    Places, faces and flavors

    Probably because Armenian brandy-making was centralized for so long,
    labels rarely refer to where the brandy was made. To be sure, many
    older brandies are named for mountains or other geographic features
    of Armenia (or famous figures in Armenian history), but those are
    brand names. Younger brandies have three to six stars on their
    labels, a star for each year of aging.

    Frankly, I'm still just getting my feet wet, as it were, in Armenian
    brandy. Besides the Mesrob Mashtots, I've tried a small
    representative range, starting with a 6-year-old Eghvard (named for a
    famous church), which had a plush butterscotchy aroma that made me
    think of an old Madeira.

    Then I had Artavazd (10 years; named for an Armenian king), which
    superimposed a smoky quality - almost like tobacco smoke (one of my
    colleagues thought it smelled like butterscotch in an ashtray).
    Vaspurakan, an 18-year-old named for a medieval Armenian kingdom, had
    a quite different emphasis, something like dried apricots and orange
    peel. That's quite a variety of styles.

    I was particularly knocked out by the Mesrob Mashtots/kataif
    combination. But many Armenians pair brandy with everything.

    "There's definitely a split in the Armenian diaspora about when to
    drink brandy," says Melkon Khosrovian, owner of the flavored vodka
    company Modern Spirits. "There are some who drink brandy with
    virtually every part of the meal, treating it in much the same way as
    wine or vodka. In our family, we drink it mainly with the mezze and
    then again with desserts."

    But for me, the best time is after a nice dinner. An agreeable
    sensation of crunch and sweetness, a mouth-filling flood of brandy,
    then a long aftertaste that drifts away into the night.


    Mesrob Mashtots Armenian brandy (about $35) is available at Mission
    Liquor, 1801 W. Washington, Pasadena, (626) 797-0500. Almond kataif
    is $7 a pound (about 10 pieces) at Sarkis Pastries, 1111 S. Glendale
    Ave., Glendale, (818) 956-6636.
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