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Touring The Tasty Russian & Armenian Goodies At Royal Market & Baker

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  • Touring The Tasty Russian & Armenian Goodies At Royal Market & Baker

    TOURING THE TASTY RUSSIAN & ARMENIAN GOODIES AT ROYAL MARKET & BAKERY

    The Bold Italic
    March 12 2015

    by Jessica Lachenal
    Mar 12 at 9am

    Deep within San Francisco's Richmond District stands an unassuming
    gem of a grocer. Looking at it from the outside, you'd be forgiven
    for mistaking it as just another corner store. But the Royal Market
    & Bakery, which serves primarily Armenian and Russian groceries and
    baked goods, has earned an avid following since opening in 2008.

    While the Armenian and Russian communities in San Francisco are fairly
    large, I wondered how this particular shop has managed to do so well.

    The store has been able to keep a loyal base of repeat customers from
    all over the Bay, managing to stick around in a neighborhood that
    has no shortage of Russian and Eastern European markets and bakeries.

    Royal Market is one of the best in its class, a standing confirmed
    by word of mouth that travels from friends and Richmond locals.

    As I learned during a recent visit, it takes more than just fresh
    groceries and a smile to keep people coming back, especially in a
    city where shopping services like Instacart, Google Express, and
    AmazonFresh fight for your dollar.

    Angela Volkovich, the store's general manager, explains that while
    the Royal Market has earned a reputation for serving somewhat rare
    products, like its award-winning marinated lula kebab meats or its
    trademark puri bread, the store has mostly been able to keep its
    customers coming back because of its adaptability. "When we started,
    we didn't know much about having a market. But we kept getting
    recommendations, and we learned from them," she says.

    On the afternoon I'm talking to her, the market is fairly busy and
    Angela greets many of the customers as regulars. As they pass by,
    she stops our conversation to make sure to say hello. Most of them
    she knows personally; she chats a bit, then we continue on.

    We spend a good part of the afternoon walking around the market,
    greeting employees, talking about the different products. I keep
    asking her, "What else do you have that I wouldn't be able to find
    anywhere else?" Angela rises to the challenge, proudly showing off
    some of her most favorite items in the store.

    Here's a sampling of those hard-to-find things that the Royal Market
    sells.

    Puri

    Puri is an Armenian bread, a close cousin of matnakash and very
    reminiscent of naan. You roll it around cheese or other vegetables,
    or dip it into hummus. Since puri is a bit smaller than matnakash,
    it tends to get harder quicker, so make sure you eat it soon after
    purchase.

    "Nobody else in the city sells puri, not like this," Angela says. She
    mentions that her award-winning version is baked three times a day,
    every day. We pass by racks upon racks of the bread and watch as a
    fresh batch is rolled out onto the floor in a free-moving cart draped
    with plastic coverings designed to keep the bread warm and fresh.

    Gata

    Angela leads me over to the hot food and bakery section and discusses
    Royal Market's desserts. Alongside the traditional baklava and cakes
    is something called gata, which is a semisweet, almost savory pastry.

    She offers a piece, and it crumbles and flakes as I bite into it, the
    sugary flavor coming through at the end. It is a lot like a layered
    butter cookie, and Jane, the in-house baker, whips up batches of gata
    fresh every day.

    Lamb Lula

    After the bakery, we walk over to the butcher counter and Angela points
    out Royal Market's lamb lula. It's a pre-marinated mixture of lamb
    meat and "special ingredients." When I press Angela for more details,
    she just gives me a conspiratorial wink. "Secret Armenian spices,"
    she says.

    Saint Gregor 50-Year Brandy

    Angela comments on one of the bottles on the Market's expansive liquor
    shelf: "We shared one of these bottles not too long ago," she says,
    nodding. "It was really something."

    Russian Standard Vodka

    Angela gestures to the store's wall of vodkas, which are impressively
    propped up against a window facing the street. Here you have your
    standard Smirnoffs, some Stolichnaya, and many different brands in
    between. There are a few bottles with names in a script I couldn't
    read. When I asked which was her favorite, I expected Angela to talk
    up the bottles with the foreign script, but she pointed to the Russian
    Standard Vodka. "It's just the smoothest," she says.

    Lahmajun

    Angela takes me back to the kitchen where all the food is made.

    There's a group of chefs prepping fresh vegetables. She explains that
    they're getting ready to make some lahmajun. "It's basically Armenian
    pizza," she says.

    Beluga Banquet Hall

    No, the Royal Market doesn't sell beluga. Beluga is a banquet hall
    located next to the store. Angela takes us through the space, which
    is set up for a party that night. The tables are decked out, the bar
    is fully stocked. Angela pulls out her phone and shows me photos of
    the events that have taken place here, along with all the catered food.

    "Sturgeon, smoked salmon, Armenian cold cuts, and everything from
    next door," she says.

    Angela obviously takes great pride in the Royal Market & Bakery,
    because of its food, but also because much of that food is based on
    the relationships she has cultivated with her customers. As I watch
    her interact with the regulars and new shoppers, I realize that she's
    running more than a market. This store doubles as a community hub for
    a lot of these people, a regular place for them to see each other and
    be seen. It's these kinds of personal and cultural bonds that take a
    standard grocer and turn it into a community staple for a neighborhood
    like the Richmond.

    Got a tip for The Bold Italic? Email [email protected].

    All photos by Jessica Lachenal except lahmacun (Wikimedia Commons)
    and Beluga Banquet Hall (used with permission from Beluga SF / Royal
    Market and Bakery).

    http://www.thebolditalic.com/articles/7046-touring-the-russian-and-armenian-goodies-at-royal-market-and-bakery

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