US TV channel feature Sevan bakery on Apr. 27
11:16 - 26.04.13
WGBH-TV's Neighborhood Kitchens, a local food, culture, and travel
show, returns for a second season of episodes to explore New England's
cultural diversity through food, The Armenian Weekly reported.
The 13-episode culinary tour began Sat., April 13 on WGBH 2 when host
Margarita Martínez visited with Joanne Chang, chef and owner at
Myers+Chang in Boston's lively South End neighborhood. On Sat., April
27, the program will feature Watertown's Sevan Bakery, where a
close-knit Armenian-American community has thrived for nearly a
century. At Sevan Bakery, co-owner Nuran Chavushian will give host
Margarita Martínez a lesson in Armenian cooking, as the two prepare
feta- and dill-stuffed boreks, karniyarik with bulghur pilaf, and his
family's signature pistachio baklava. Martínez will also get a tour of
Sevan's market, sampling the olives, nuts, and dried fruits that stock
the wall-to-wall shelves. The show airs at 4 p.m. on WGBH 2.
Neighborhood Kitchens brings viewers on an intimate tour of New
England's diverse communities and offers an up-close culinary lesson
with some of the region's most celebrated chefs. Margarita Martínez, a
Providence-based actress and a graduate of the Tisch School of the
Arts at NYU, will return as host in season two.
`We are very excited to continue the culinary journey we stared in our
first season,' said series producer Patricia Alvarado Núñez. `From
across the region, this season's neighborhood dining spots will offer
a delicious range of world cuisines and the chefs who have been
perfecting them.'
`I can't wait to take WGBH viewers on a trip across New England every
Saturday afternoon,' Martínez said. `In this season of Neighborhood
Kitchens, we'll explore how New England celebrates the culinary
traditions of Armenian, Mediterranean, Vietnamese, Indian, and Italian
cultures, as well as Boston's storied connection to the sea.'
Neighborhood Kitchens is produced by WGBH's La Plaza unit, which has
been producing Latino and multicultural programming for nearly 35
years. A companion website features an archive of full episodes,
exclusive chef recipes, behind-the-scenes photos, in-depth chef
profiles, and interactive boards for viewers to leave comments and
recipes of their own.
Armenian News - Tert.am
11:16 - 26.04.13
WGBH-TV's Neighborhood Kitchens, a local food, culture, and travel
show, returns for a second season of episodes to explore New England's
cultural diversity through food, The Armenian Weekly reported.
The 13-episode culinary tour began Sat., April 13 on WGBH 2 when host
Margarita Martínez visited with Joanne Chang, chef and owner at
Myers+Chang in Boston's lively South End neighborhood. On Sat., April
27, the program will feature Watertown's Sevan Bakery, where a
close-knit Armenian-American community has thrived for nearly a
century. At Sevan Bakery, co-owner Nuran Chavushian will give host
Margarita Martínez a lesson in Armenian cooking, as the two prepare
feta- and dill-stuffed boreks, karniyarik with bulghur pilaf, and his
family's signature pistachio baklava. Martínez will also get a tour of
Sevan's market, sampling the olives, nuts, and dried fruits that stock
the wall-to-wall shelves. The show airs at 4 p.m. on WGBH 2.
Neighborhood Kitchens brings viewers on an intimate tour of New
England's diverse communities and offers an up-close culinary lesson
with some of the region's most celebrated chefs. Margarita Martínez, a
Providence-based actress and a graduate of the Tisch School of the
Arts at NYU, will return as host in season two.
`We are very excited to continue the culinary journey we stared in our
first season,' said series producer Patricia Alvarado Núñez. `From
across the region, this season's neighborhood dining spots will offer
a delicious range of world cuisines and the chefs who have been
perfecting them.'
`I can't wait to take WGBH viewers on a trip across New England every
Saturday afternoon,' Martínez said. `In this season of Neighborhood
Kitchens, we'll explore how New England celebrates the culinary
traditions of Armenian, Mediterranean, Vietnamese, Indian, and Italian
cultures, as well as Boston's storied connection to the sea.'
Neighborhood Kitchens is produced by WGBH's La Plaza unit, which has
been producing Latino and multicultural programming for nearly 35
years. A companion website features an archive of full episodes,
exclusive chef recipes, behind-the-scenes photos, in-depth chef
profiles, and interactive boards for viewers to leave comments and
recipes of their own.
Armenian News - Tert.am