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  • Fresh from Easter ovens

    Montreal Gazette

    Fresh from Easter ovens

    Tsoureki, chorek, folar de Pascoa: Around Montreal this week, bakers are
    creating special breads that symbolize the resurrection

    SUSAN SEMENAK
    The Gazette

    Wednesday, March 23, 2005

    When I was a little girl, there was no running, jumping or frolicking in the
    house on Good Friday.

    For Christians, it is the most solemn day of the year, marking the
    anniversary of Christ's death.

    My mother's Good Friday edicts, however, had more to do with the massive tub
    of paska dough that was left to rise - like a baby swaddled in layers of
    dishcloths, towels and woollen blankets - in a bedroom with the door closed
    and a space heater cranked to full blast.

    Mixing, kneading and baking the traditional Ukrainian Easter bread was an
    all-day affair that called for 10 pounds of flour and a dozen eggs and
    relied on a hand-scrawled, oil-stained recipe handed down over several
    generations. The next day, the paskas, along with boiled eggs, horseradish,
    butter, cheese, eggs and kielbasa sausage, would be transferred to decorated
    baskets lined with embroidered linens, and brought to the church hall for
    blessing.

    In many Christian traditions, special Easter breads are baked to symbolize
    Christ's resurrection. Some cultures bake whole eggs, ancient symbols of
    spring and fertility, into their breads. Others shape theirs into the form
    of birds or animals.

    The Greeks have their tsourekia - rich, brioche-like braided breads,
    seasoned with the spices mahlepi and mastiha and with red-dyed, hard-boiled
    eggs baked into them.

    "You can't have Easter without tsoureki," said Christos Hatzimarkos, head
    pastry chef at Afroditi, the Greek bakery and pastry shop in Park Extension.
    In the old days, everybody made their own, but now they are just as likely
    to order it from his bakery.

    "After going through all of Lent without sweets, a slice of tsoureki is
    delicious with coffee right after midnight mass or on Easter morning. And
    then again after supper."

    Armenians have their own version, called chorek, also a spiced sweet-dough
    bread braided around an egg. Khatchik Merdjanian, who owns Armenia Bakery in
    north-end Montreal, likes his chorek for Easter brunch, along with a
    traditional egg, onion and parsley omelette called ekee, and yogurt and
    spinach.

    In Portugal, they dream throughout Lent of folar de Pascoa, a fat,
    pumpkin-shaped bread studded with coloured hard-boiled eggs. Sometimes it's
    flavoured with raisins and cinnamon, or anise.

    Italians eat special breads at Easter, too, a savoury loaf called a corona
    pasquale or a dove-shaped loaf called a colomba. And for Easter Monday, when
    Italians in and around Rome head outdoors for a picnic, there's torta salata
    pasquale, Easter bread with prosciutto, olives and parmesan cheese.

    For Montrealers without the time or inclination to bake their own Easter
    bread, there is a wealth of bakeries whose shelves are filled with seasonal
    sweets and savouries:

    Afroditi Bakery has an assortment of Greek Easter treats. Tsourekia are
    traditional brioche-like braided loaves with red-dyed eggs (from $7 to $25
    depending on the size). Also try the koulourakia shortbread cookies for
    Easter ($8 for a 500-gram box).

    756 St. Roch St. in Park Extension. (514) 274-5302.
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