Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Festival Grows To Two Days

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

  • Armenian Festival Grows To Two Days

    ARMENIAN FESTIVAL GROWS TO TWO DAYS

    http://armenpress.am/eng/news/735489/armenian-festival-grows-to-two-days.html
    17:36, 4 October, 2013

    YEREVAN, OCTOBER 4, ARMENPRESS. It took fingers from a considerable
    portion of the globe to make the modest vegetarian grape leaves that
    will sell three for $2 at this weekend's Armenian Festival.

    As reports Armenpress referring to Daily Pilot, Wednesday morning,
    one man and about a dozen women gathered around the food preparation
    table at St. Mary Armenian Church in Costa Mesa, stuffing marinated
    leaves with fillings of rice, onions and parsley.

    Asked whether many members of the group came from Armenia, Ladies
    Society chairwoman Claudette Mekalian asked those present to state
    their countries of origin.

    An eclectic series of responses echoed back: "Syria." "Turkey."

    "Lebanon." "Bulgaria." "Belize." Others mentioned some truly exotic
    faraway lands, like Fresno and Bakersfield.

    Members of the congregation of the Eastside church may have taken
    diverse roads to Costa Mesa, but they share a bond over faith and
    festivity. And that also goes for the crowds that fill the annual
    Armenian Festival, which began in 2009 and is expanding this year to
    two days instead of one.

    "We've made a lot of things," Mekalian said. "Our freezer and
    refrigerator are filled with pastries. This isn't the first day we're
    all together.

    The Ladies Society is the heart of the church."

    Saturday and Sunday, the church grounds will fill with vendor booths,
    food, music, dancing and more. Officials will offer tours of the
    church, while Tom Bozigian, the leader of the four-piece band that
    will play both days, will teach traditional Armenian dances.

    Archpriest Moushegh Tashjian said the church decided to expand the
    festival to two days because of growing attendance. St. Mary first
    began hosting the festival during its formative years two decades ago,
    but with volunteers and resources limited, it put the event on hiatus
    before long.

    "It involved [a] lot of hard work, you know," Tashjian said. "We were
    short. We were a growing parish."

    By 2009, the church had expanded enough that Tashjian and his
    colleagues opted to try the festival out again, and the response
    encouraged them to keep going. This year's festival is expected to
    require the help of about 120 church members.

    Work in the kitchen began Tuesday, as the team prepared cheese boreg,
    baklava and other traditional dishes. At the festival, chefs will
    barbecue meat kabobs as well.

    Festival chairwoman Debbie Simonian said that even though the event
    celebrates Armenian culture, it draws a wide audience - and she always
    enjoys making converts.

    "It's fun because so many of them don't think they've ever tasted
    Armenian food, and then when they taste it, they're surprised,"
    she said.

    "It's like, 'Oh, we eat kabobs all the time!'"

Working...
X