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  • LA: Top 10 Armenian bakeries in Southern California

    http://www.latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-armside 18apr18,1,7376986.story?coll=la-headlines-food

    SW EET THINGS

    Top 10 Armenian bakeries in Southern California


    In the mood for unusual sweets? Here are our top 10 among the myriad local
    Armenian bakeries.


    April 18, 2007

    As home to one of the largest Armenian colonies in the world, Los Angeles
    supports about 70 Armenian bakeries. They suggest that Armenians may just
    have the biggest sweet tooth in the world.

    And the most eclectic sweet tooth too. Beside their own ancient pastries
    such as a bread-y coffee cake called gata, they're into baklavas, Persian
    fritters and Russian doughnuts. On top of that, Armenia has cultural ties
    with France dating back to the Crusades, so a lot of the bakeries specialize
    in French pastry. Still, they usually sell some baklavas, gatas, perok (a
    coffee cake-like fruit tart) and the flaky cookie nazouk.

    Though there are pastry shops in the older Armenian hotspots of north
    Pasadena and east Hollywood, Glendale is the place to go. It has 14 pastry
    shops - and there's plenty of spillover in Burbank, North Hollywood and
    elsewhere in the Valley.

    We checked out nearly 50 Armenian bakeries. This is our selection of the top
    10 for the non-French side of the Armenian pastry menu.

    Baklava Factory, 1415 E. Colorado Ave., Suite K, Glendale, (818) 548-7070,
    also 17145 Ventura Blvd., Encino, (818) 728-1600 and 12909 Sherman Way,
    North Hollywood, (818) 764-1011, www.baklavafactory.com. Well-made baklava,
    cookies and fritters, though not baked on the premises but in a central
    bakery in Sylmar.

    Lord & Villa Bakery, 1120 N. Pacific Ave., No. 3, Glendale, (818) 500-8040.
    An upscale operation, mostly French, but it also has a large Armenian
    section that includes several varieties of fruit-filled gata. The cherry
    perok is positively overflowing with cherry filling.

    Maggie's Bakery, 6530 Lankershim Blvd., North Hollywood, (818) 506-6265. A
    big, gleaming pastry shop in an inconspicuous mall; three counters of French
    pastries and one of baklavas, gatas and walnut-filled cookies. Particularly
    notable for kul wushkur, a buttery, exceptionally flaky folded baklava (it
    looks like a tiny book with its pages fluttering open) enclosing a
    syrup-soaked walnut filling.

    Maral's Pastry, 17654 Vanowen St., Van Nuys, (818) 705-8921. Excellent
    baklava-type pastries (of the tender, rather than the crisp, school), cheese
    pastry (halawat jibn), sesame-pistachio cookies (barazek) and those fabulous
    tahini cookies.

    Movses Pastry, 1755 W. Glenoaks Blvd., No. 4, Glendale, (818) 545-0099;
    www.movsespastry.com. Half French, half Armenian. Good fresh baklava,
    several flavors of perok and gata, a number of nazouks.

    Oasis Pastry (also known as Mary's Oasis or M. Shatila), 801 S. Glendale
    Blvd., Glendale, (818) 244-2255. It may be Lebanese-owned, but it's in the
    middle of Armenian Glendale and most of the employees speak Armenian. Very
    good pastries, including a remarkably flaky one that resembles kul wushkur
    but which they insist on calling almond baklava.

    Panos Pastry Bakery, 5150 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles, (323) 661-0335; also
    418 S. Central Ave., Glendale, (818) 502-0549; www.panospastry.com. A grand
    pastry palace with marble floors and mirrors, a large selection of Armenian
    pastries and an even larger one of French pastries. Long the standard of
    Hollywood Armenian bakeries; the baklava is light and crisp but not terribly
    buttery.

    Sarkis Pastry, 1111 S. Glendale Ave., Glendale, (818) 956-6636;
    www.sarkispastry.com. The pride of Glendale has one of the widest ranges of
    Middle Eastern pastries around, including osmanlia (layers of kadayif and
    nuts) and tahini cookies.

    Van Bakery, 5409 W. Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, (323) 466-2450; also 620 S.
    Glendale Ave., Suite H, Glendale, (818) 548-5253. In addition to the usual
    pastries, Van makes what looks like a baklava that's dribbled with a little
    chocolate. Inside, there's a layer of crisp kadayif pastry, making it
    lighter and crunchier than ordinary baklava.

    Vrej Pastry, 1074 N. Allen Ave., Pasadena, (626) 797-2331; also 11148 Balboa
    Blvd., Granada Hills, (818) 366-2526; and 1791 East Route 66, Glendora,
    (626) 914-1940. Good for cheese pastry, barazek and dainty burma (kadayif
    nut rolls).

    - Charles Perry



    Hot on the trail of tahini cookies

    Even with 70-odd Armenian bakeries in the L.A. area, it's a challenge to get
    someone to share the recipe.

    By Charles Perry
    Times Staff Writer

    April 18, 2007

    The other day, a co-worker brought in some mysterious cookies from an
    Armenian bakery, a little sheepish about having polished off about a third
    of them on the way.

    They were tan domes with a tight spiral pattern on top, making them look a
    bit like snail shells lying on their sides. The pastry had a distinctive
    taste, more wholesome than cookie dough, followed by a little blast of
    richness from that spiral, which turned out to be a filling of sesame
    tahini. It tasted like peanut butter without peanut butter's funky edge.

    In other words, these were cookies we could eat a lot of, and we proceeded
    to do so. But not before I saved one or two to explore their mystery.

    When you cut one in half, the interior turned out to be curving lines of
    pastry alternating with darker caverns of sesame filling, vaguely like the
    pattern of layers in a halved onion.

    Whatever it was, the pastry was definitely not cookie dough. I had to know
    what was going on here.

    This plunged me into the vortex of the 70-odd Armenian bakeries in the L.A.
    area. Some were bread bakeries, but a lot were filled with case after case
    of French patisserie and syrup-soaked baklavas - dangerous places to wander
    around in.

    Only a couple of pastry shops made these tahini cookies. But how did this
    innocent cookie end up in these glittering palaces of seduction anyway?

    It turned out that this "cookie" is considered to be a bread - not a pastry
    - because it's made with yeast-risen dough. It happens to be a clever
    variation on Middle Eastern tahini bread (in Arabic, khubz tahini; in
    Armenian, tahinov hats), which is usually made as a pita-size flatbread.

    Some Armenian bakeries, such as Taron in east Hollywood, make this big, flat
    variety, but Maral's Pastry in Van Nuys and Sarkis Pastry in Glendale make
    the dome-cookie version.

    Elusive recipe

    To us, it was no contest: The dome shape is better. It's a more convenient
    size and easier to eat, and the balance of flavors is better.

    But we wanted to know: How do you make these irresistible treats?

    The only recipe I could find was in an obscure cookbook published 25 years
    ago in Saudi Arabia, and it didn't give the exact result we wanted, even
    after tweaking it nine ways.

    So I asked some Armenian bakers, but they were reluctant to give out their
    recipes. One told me, "You ask about my business, you ask too many
    questions, my friend."

    Uh-oh. I should have foreseen this - it's a Middle Eastern tradition, as I
    already knew: When I traveled around Syria in 1980, I naively asked bakers
    in every town from Damascus to Aleppo about the local pastries, and their
    answers were always incomprehensible.

    Finally, my driver took me aside and darkly told me, "Not even to their own
    sons, not till they're on their death beds, will they tell their secrets."

    Well, I understood. It's a bakery-eat-bakery world out there, and a pastry
    chef doesn't want to give up his edge. Still, that bread-cookie remained
    outside our grasp.

    Finally, Hovsep Sarkozian of Maral's took pity on us and spelled it out. The
    secret seemed to be (as we should have known): This is a cross between a
    bread and a cookie, so it needs sugar and oil in the dough. Once it rises,
    you shape it and bake it right away without the sort of rests and additional
    rises that bread dough usually gets.

    To tell the truth, even the versions that hadn't been exactly what we wanted
    - the ones with loose spirals or dough that was too puffy or the ones that
    didn't brown up enough - were quite good.

    So finally the quest was over.

    Not that I'm going to stop going to Armenian bakeries, mind you.

    Man does not live by tahini bread alone.

    [email protected]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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