Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Feast from Fire

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A Feast from Fire

    A Feast from Fire
    Any occasion will do for an Armenian barbecue

    Bronwyn Dunne
    Saveur Magazine, no. 87 (October)
    "Fare," p. 28
    http://www.saveur.com

    My introduction to the Urartu fire god occurred last year while my husband
    and I were living in Yerevan, the capital city of Armenia. A new friend,
    Yulia, announced one day that we were going on a picnic to experience the
    national food and outdoor event known as khorovats. The word is Armenian
    for barbecue--typically a spread of grilled skewers of lamb or pork served
    with vegetables, lavash (flat bread), and ample helpings of vodka--but it is
    also Armenian for birthday party, wedding anniversary, or any other
    celebration you have in mind. If the weather is beautiful or your cousin
    has just bought a new car or your two-year-old has just lost a tooth, then
    you have an excuse for a khorovats.

    Khorovats also celebrates something far more ancient: fire. Looking up at
    Mount Ararat, a peak looming nearly 17,000 feet over Yerevan, you can
    imagine the importance of fire when the winter winds blew down the
    mountain's lofty flanks and swept over the shepherds guarding their flocks
    below--so it's no wonder that a principal deity of the Urartu, an ancient
    Armenian civilization dating to the 13th century B.C., was the one concerned
    with flame. It was an Urartu tradition that the men would build a fire
    after they'd returned from the hunt and pray to the gods for another day of
    good luck.

    The first stop on the morning of our picnic was at the apartment of one of
    Yulia's friends, Armen. He was to be the chef and manager at our event. We
    watched with a mixture of alarm and admiration as Armen packed his
    Soviet-era Lada with all thenecessities for our meal--blankets, trays of
    marinating pork, a heavy iron coffeepot, skewers as long as swords, bottles
    of vodka and water, and plastic bags full of peppers, eggplants, tomatoes,
    and potatoes--along with his wife, twin daughters, and young son. Then our
    little band caravaned off to the highlands north of Yerevan. We forded a
    stream almost too deep for our cars to cross and drove through the rural
    countryside on challenging wagon roads until the ideal site was found.

    Armen, his friend Tigran, and the other men--men are always responsible for
    the cooking at a khorovats--built a fire in the grill and then gathered
    around, beers in hand, looking a lot like their suburban American
    counterparts. Our food was cooked in a specific order: first the skewers
    threaded with the whole vegetables, then the skewers of seasoned ground pork
    and of alternating chunks of pork and potato. The lavash bread, which we
    would use in place of utensils, was baked in a tonir, an oven dug in the
    ground.

    Peeling the cooked vegetables was a ritual overseen by the women. We
    stripped the skins with our fingers and then sliced them into a bowl filled
    with onions, salt, and pepper. Our fingers became so black from the charred
    skins that there was much laughter over the mess that we were making.

    Once everything was ready, the vodka was poured, and, with raised paper
    cups, we made a toast to our Armenian friends. They wished us good health
    in return, and then we broke bread in the shadow of Mount Ararat, just like
    the shepherds of old.
Working...
X