A WALK THROUGH THE OLD PASTRY SHOPS OF DOWNTOWN TEHRAN
Our correspondent follows her nose to some remnants of a bygone age
Hans bakery, Tehran, Iran Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
Tehran Bureau correspondent
Monday 2 February 2015 13.09 GMT
"The Armenians, the Turks and the Greeks all claim to have invented
Turkish coffee."
"So who was it, really?" I ask.
"The Armenians of course!" he retorts loudly, his eyeballs popping out,
as if shocked that I would even ponder the question.
Meet the owner of Lord Confectionary in Villa Street, downtown Tehran,
just across from St Sarkis Cathedral. Today, the area is mostly
handicraft tourist stores, and many buildings have been bought by
Payam-e Noor (distance learning) University. Two decades ago, this
section of the street was mainly residential and one of Tehran's
Armenian quarters.
Stepping into Lord through the white metal door, you see a small flight
of stairs to your left, which leads up to the cafe's sitting area,
where signs on the walls remind "dear guests" to sit no longer than
30 minutes. The rule is enforced only during busy hours.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest expand Lord Confectionary, Villa Street,
Tehran Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
The main floor is where the pastries and cakes are sold. In recent
years, quality has declined. When Maggie, the feisty manager, was
here, she held onto the older pastry chefs and bakers. Once she left,
the cookie crumbled, so to speak.
We keep coming to Lord not for the quality of the pastries, but for
the whiff of nostalgia. Also, the apricot tarts aren't too bad, and
the store offers a variety of cakes, tarts, cookies and pirogi made
with unusually light Danish-pastry dough.
Tehranis do not take their pastries lightly - literally. Baked goods
are sold in boxes of a minimum 500g (1.1lb) going all the way to 2kg
(4.4lb). It isn't strange to see someone walking out carrying several
boxes heaped in a precarious pile.
The Iranian palette is no stranger to sweets - from the haji badomi
(sugary almond balls) of Yazd to the kolompeh (crisp, date-stuffed
cookies) of Kerman. But Tehran has managed to take the European pastry
and make its own, a bread pastry that is the perfect complement to
afternoon tea.
Lalezar in the 1960s Photograph: ShahreFarang.com
"Armenians introduced Tehran to the European pastry," the owner
of Lord tells me. His father opened the shop in 1964, he explains,
decades after Tehran's first Armenian pastry store was opened in the
bustling, now almost mythical Lalehzar Street. "They packed up and left
for the United States after the revolution, but we had thick skin."
There is no shortage of good pastry shops in downtown. Upscale
bakeries have taken over in north Tehran, but this is still the Mecca
of shirini (baked sweets). Walking a few minutes south from Lord,
on Taleqani Street you will find one of Tehran's best pastry stores:
Shirini Danmarki (Danish Pastry), where the pastries have undergone
an Iranian metamorphosis.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest expand Danish Pastry shop, Tehran
Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
The shop offers custard or apricot jam in a buttery crust, apple
filled tarts, and Iranian style puff pastry. People come in especially
on the half hour (from 8:30 am onward) as the famed noon danmarki -
slices of flaky bread stuffed with their own special crème patisserie
and sprinkled with sugar - emerges fresh from the oven.
I ask the lady behind the counter if I can apply to intern in the
kitchen, but she only looks at me with wide eyes. "With 17 sibiloo
(mustached) male labourers?" she asks. The city's pastry empire is
dominated by mardhayeh kargar (male labourers), who you would never
imagine could make a butter crust so flaky and light. She lets me peek
into their kitchen, where more than a dozen heavily-bellied men are
painstakingly preparing dough or custard, or putting the finishing
touches on a cake.
For me, an ideal day is roaming downtown's old districts, then
stopping at Danish Pastry for sweets. Then, going for lunch at
Soren, an Armenian sandwich store located between Danish and Lord
at the intersection of Villa and Warsaw streets: it has been making
sumptuous, reasonably priced steak sandwiches sprinkled with diced
herbs for generations of downtown dwellers. Then, back to Lord for
coffee. Or the whole ritual can be practised in reverse.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest expand A whiff of the past, Hans' garden,
Tehran Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
West of Lord, on Aban street, in a quaint corner with old houses,
stands Hans Bakery. If you didn't notice the sign on the green door,
you'd mistake it for another home. Inside, there are flowers in the
yard, and from the kitchen comes the sound of banging pots and pans.
The sweet smells of caramel, vanilla and cake lead the way.
The claim to fame of Hans is the delicious sponge cake layered with
vanilla cream and strawberries. To get your hands on one, you must
arrive before noon, or call to have them save you one. Go earlier and
you will find the owners barking rapid Armenian to people over the
phone as customers call in to make sure their cake is reserved. The
store also sells tarts, an assortment of cookies and cream pastries,
but it is their strawberry vanilla cake that makes up for their
usually grumpy manners.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest expand Strawberry cream cake at Hans,
Tehran Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
To find good natured folks, Orient Cafe, in what was once Roosevelt
Avenue (now Moffateh) is the place to go: a brightly lit, spacious
Armenian bakery and cafe, where Mr Sevak and his mother manage
day-to-day operations. Their coffee is among the best in the city
and the chocolate covered orange slices are always tender and full of
flavour. Orient also offers delightful perok, a light apricot cake,
and nazook, a crisp Armenian pastry baked here with a walnut filling.
These days, new cafes are sprouting up across Tehran and in an
effort to outdo each other, they have introduced elaborate decor,
dim lighting, strangely named pastas, or salads with unfamiliar French
words. Mr Sevak is old school: "My motto at Orient is, this is not a
pasta store, or a salad bar. People should come here for coffee and
pastries, plain and simple."
Orient was established in 1943 by immigrants from Soviet Armenia. Mr
Sevak's family bought the cafe and bakery 15 years ago, following
their successful experience with the Anahita Bakery in Sohrevardi
Street. His mother oversees the workers in the bakery, and some from
the original store were still here until around ten years ago. Bakers
serve as the memory of their establishments, learning and perfecting
recipes and passing them on.
Many Armenian bakeries also operate as cafes, the most well-known
of these being Naderi Cafe, in Jomhoori Street, where generations of
writers and artists and students have gathered, and still do. Naderi
no longer bakes sweets - but offers raisin cake and roulette (cake
roll) brought in. Both always taste stale, but how can you refuse
Reza Khan, the jolly waiter, as he insists you'll enjoy a slice of
cake with your coffee?
Facebook Twitter Pinterest expand Nobel, an Armenian bakery in Mirzayeh
Shirazi Street, Tehran, Iran Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
For the best accompaniment to a cup of coffee, you once walked to
Nobel, an Armenian bakery in Mirzayeh Shirazi Street, not far from
Lord. Opened in 1963, Nobel baked Tehran's best cream cookie: layer
upon layer of light, airy biscuit covered with crème patisserie and
their own distinct cookie powder. Nobel also baked sour cherry and
peach pies.
But last summer, the store was suddenly replaced by a kallehpazi,
a store specializing in kalleh pache, a dish of sheep head and hooves.
The male staff of the restaurant told me the owners had sold up and
moved to the United States.
So just like that, a monument in Tehran forever disappears. This is
not a city where legacies last: they pack up and immigrate.
At least Talaie, another Armenian bakery on Mirzayeh Shirazi Street
is still here, next door to the Armenian owned toy and greeting card
stores. A small hole-in-the-wall kind of bakery, it sells the best
Armenian gata - sweet bread - you can find in Tehran.
Expect long lines at 4 pm when the day's bread is brought out. Gata is
finely layered and in Tehran usually has koritz, a filling of flour,
butter and sugar. Nothing goes better with a cup of Turkish coffee
than a slice of gata and homemade jam.
Armenians are known not only for their pastries, they opened some of
Tehran's first chocolate shops. In the historic areas of Sadi and
Hedayat streets, you will find Mignon bakery and chocolatier. The
staff will tell you the shop has been here for 80 years and offer to
show you a bound album with pictures of their California stores in
Glendale and Pasadena.
The Boghossian family has managed Mignon since 1935, after fleeing to
Iran from communist Ukraine where their father was imprisoned - he
joined them a few years later. The youngest son, 73-year-old Roben,
still runs the Tehran store and can be occasionally found there. My
favourite at Mignon is dark chocolate covered marzipan with a hint
of orange peel. At Christmas, the store is splendidly decorated
and boxes of cakes and chocolates, wrapped in colourful ribbons,
are piled everywhere.
To walk into any of these stores is to connect to the old Tehran that
we have heard so much of, to scattered remnants of an era largely gone.
"Nobel disappeared overnight," I complain to the store clerk at
Mignon. "I'm terrified that one day I'll walk to your store and you'll
have left too."
She smiles and says, in a deep Armenian accent: "Who knows? Maybe. But
for now, try to come, we'll be here."
http://www.theguardian.com/world/iran-blog/2015/feb/02/-sp-tehran-confectionaries-armenian-bakeries-iran
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Our correspondent follows her nose to some remnants of a bygone age
Hans bakery, Tehran, Iran Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
Tehran Bureau correspondent
Monday 2 February 2015 13.09 GMT
"The Armenians, the Turks and the Greeks all claim to have invented
Turkish coffee."
"So who was it, really?" I ask.
"The Armenians of course!" he retorts loudly, his eyeballs popping out,
as if shocked that I would even ponder the question.
Meet the owner of Lord Confectionary in Villa Street, downtown Tehran,
just across from St Sarkis Cathedral. Today, the area is mostly
handicraft tourist stores, and many buildings have been bought by
Payam-e Noor (distance learning) University. Two decades ago, this
section of the street was mainly residential and one of Tehran's
Armenian quarters.
Stepping into Lord through the white metal door, you see a small flight
of stairs to your left, which leads up to the cafe's sitting area,
where signs on the walls remind "dear guests" to sit no longer than
30 minutes. The rule is enforced only during busy hours.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest expand Lord Confectionary, Villa Street,
Tehran Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
The main floor is where the pastries and cakes are sold. In recent
years, quality has declined. When Maggie, the feisty manager, was
here, she held onto the older pastry chefs and bakers. Once she left,
the cookie crumbled, so to speak.
We keep coming to Lord not for the quality of the pastries, but for
the whiff of nostalgia. Also, the apricot tarts aren't too bad, and
the store offers a variety of cakes, tarts, cookies and pirogi made
with unusually light Danish-pastry dough.
Tehranis do not take their pastries lightly - literally. Baked goods
are sold in boxes of a minimum 500g (1.1lb) going all the way to 2kg
(4.4lb). It isn't strange to see someone walking out carrying several
boxes heaped in a precarious pile.
The Iranian palette is no stranger to sweets - from the haji badomi
(sugary almond balls) of Yazd to the kolompeh (crisp, date-stuffed
cookies) of Kerman. But Tehran has managed to take the European pastry
and make its own, a bread pastry that is the perfect complement to
afternoon tea.
Lalezar in the 1960s Photograph: ShahreFarang.com
"Armenians introduced Tehran to the European pastry," the owner
of Lord tells me. His father opened the shop in 1964, he explains,
decades after Tehran's first Armenian pastry store was opened in the
bustling, now almost mythical Lalehzar Street. "They packed up and left
for the United States after the revolution, but we had thick skin."
There is no shortage of good pastry shops in downtown. Upscale
bakeries have taken over in north Tehran, but this is still the Mecca
of shirini (baked sweets). Walking a few minutes south from Lord,
on Taleqani Street you will find one of Tehran's best pastry stores:
Shirini Danmarki (Danish Pastry), where the pastries have undergone
an Iranian metamorphosis.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest expand Danish Pastry shop, Tehran
Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
The shop offers custard or apricot jam in a buttery crust, apple
filled tarts, and Iranian style puff pastry. People come in especially
on the half hour (from 8:30 am onward) as the famed noon danmarki -
slices of flaky bread stuffed with their own special crème patisserie
and sprinkled with sugar - emerges fresh from the oven.
I ask the lady behind the counter if I can apply to intern in the
kitchen, but she only looks at me with wide eyes. "With 17 sibiloo
(mustached) male labourers?" she asks. The city's pastry empire is
dominated by mardhayeh kargar (male labourers), who you would never
imagine could make a butter crust so flaky and light. She lets me peek
into their kitchen, where more than a dozen heavily-bellied men are
painstakingly preparing dough or custard, or putting the finishing
touches on a cake.
For me, an ideal day is roaming downtown's old districts, then
stopping at Danish Pastry for sweets. Then, going for lunch at
Soren, an Armenian sandwich store located between Danish and Lord
at the intersection of Villa and Warsaw streets: it has been making
sumptuous, reasonably priced steak sandwiches sprinkled with diced
herbs for generations of downtown dwellers. Then, back to Lord for
coffee. Or the whole ritual can be practised in reverse.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest expand A whiff of the past, Hans' garden,
Tehran Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
West of Lord, on Aban street, in a quaint corner with old houses,
stands Hans Bakery. If you didn't notice the sign on the green door,
you'd mistake it for another home. Inside, there are flowers in the
yard, and from the kitchen comes the sound of banging pots and pans.
The sweet smells of caramel, vanilla and cake lead the way.
The claim to fame of Hans is the delicious sponge cake layered with
vanilla cream and strawberries. To get your hands on one, you must
arrive before noon, or call to have them save you one. Go earlier and
you will find the owners barking rapid Armenian to people over the
phone as customers call in to make sure their cake is reserved. The
store also sells tarts, an assortment of cookies and cream pastries,
but it is their strawberry vanilla cake that makes up for their
usually grumpy manners.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest expand Strawberry cream cake at Hans,
Tehran Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
To find good natured folks, Orient Cafe, in what was once Roosevelt
Avenue (now Moffateh) is the place to go: a brightly lit, spacious
Armenian bakery and cafe, where Mr Sevak and his mother manage
day-to-day operations. Their coffee is among the best in the city
and the chocolate covered orange slices are always tender and full of
flavour. Orient also offers delightful perok, a light apricot cake,
and nazook, a crisp Armenian pastry baked here with a walnut filling.
These days, new cafes are sprouting up across Tehran and in an
effort to outdo each other, they have introduced elaborate decor,
dim lighting, strangely named pastas, or salads with unfamiliar French
words. Mr Sevak is old school: "My motto at Orient is, this is not a
pasta store, or a salad bar. People should come here for coffee and
pastries, plain and simple."
Orient was established in 1943 by immigrants from Soviet Armenia. Mr
Sevak's family bought the cafe and bakery 15 years ago, following
their successful experience with the Anahita Bakery in Sohrevardi
Street. His mother oversees the workers in the bakery, and some from
the original store were still here until around ten years ago. Bakers
serve as the memory of their establishments, learning and perfecting
recipes and passing them on.
Many Armenian bakeries also operate as cafes, the most well-known
of these being Naderi Cafe, in Jomhoori Street, where generations of
writers and artists and students have gathered, and still do. Naderi
no longer bakes sweets - but offers raisin cake and roulette (cake
roll) brought in. Both always taste stale, but how can you refuse
Reza Khan, the jolly waiter, as he insists you'll enjoy a slice of
cake with your coffee?
Facebook Twitter Pinterest expand Nobel, an Armenian bakery in Mirzayeh
Shirazi Street, Tehran, Iran Photograph: The Tehran Bureau
For the best accompaniment to a cup of coffee, you once walked to
Nobel, an Armenian bakery in Mirzayeh Shirazi Street, not far from
Lord. Opened in 1963, Nobel baked Tehran's best cream cookie: layer
upon layer of light, airy biscuit covered with crème patisserie and
their own distinct cookie powder. Nobel also baked sour cherry and
peach pies.
But last summer, the store was suddenly replaced by a kallehpazi,
a store specializing in kalleh pache, a dish of sheep head and hooves.
The male staff of the restaurant told me the owners had sold up and
moved to the United States.
So just like that, a monument in Tehran forever disappears. This is
not a city where legacies last: they pack up and immigrate.
At least Talaie, another Armenian bakery on Mirzayeh Shirazi Street
is still here, next door to the Armenian owned toy and greeting card
stores. A small hole-in-the-wall kind of bakery, it sells the best
Armenian gata - sweet bread - you can find in Tehran.
Expect long lines at 4 pm when the day's bread is brought out. Gata is
finely layered and in Tehran usually has koritz, a filling of flour,
butter and sugar. Nothing goes better with a cup of Turkish coffee
than a slice of gata and homemade jam.
Armenians are known not only for their pastries, they opened some of
Tehran's first chocolate shops. In the historic areas of Sadi and
Hedayat streets, you will find Mignon bakery and chocolatier. The
staff will tell you the shop has been here for 80 years and offer to
show you a bound album with pictures of their California stores in
Glendale and Pasadena.
The Boghossian family has managed Mignon since 1935, after fleeing to
Iran from communist Ukraine where their father was imprisoned - he
joined them a few years later. The youngest son, 73-year-old Roben,
still runs the Tehran store and can be occasionally found there. My
favourite at Mignon is dark chocolate covered marzipan with a hint
of orange peel. At Christmas, the store is splendidly decorated
and boxes of cakes and chocolates, wrapped in colourful ribbons,
are piled everywhere.
To walk into any of these stores is to connect to the old Tehran that
we have heard so much of, to scattered remnants of an era largely gone.
"Nobel disappeared overnight," I complain to the store clerk at
Mignon. "I'm terrified that one day I'll walk to your store and you'll
have left too."
She smiles and says, in a deep Armenian accent: "Who knows? Maybe. But
for now, try to come, we'll be here."
http://www.theguardian.com/world/iran-blog/2015/feb/02/-sp-tehran-confectionaries-armenian-bakeries-iran
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress