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Armenian Food Is Star At Four-Day Fest

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  • Armenian Food Is Star At Four-Day Fest

    ARMENIAN FOOD IS STAR AT FOUR-DAY FEST
    By Jann Malone

    Richmond Times Dispatch
    http://www.inrich.com/cva/ric/entertainme nt.apx.-content-articles-RTD-2008-09-17-0005.html
    Sept 17 2008
    VA

    If you think you don't like lamb, the cooks at this year's Armenian
    Food Festival would like you to try one of their Hye burgers.

    Hye -- it means Armenian in Armenia -- are half lamb, half sirloin
    beef, plus plenty of spices. "People who didn't think they liked lamb
    have ordered the Hye burgers," said Anne Tootelian Norris, who sees
    what's selling during the festival because she works the cash register.

    . . .

    This is the 50th year for the festival, which opens tomorrow and
    runs through Sunday at St. James Armenian Church in Richmond at 834
    Pepper Ave. on the corner of Patterson and Pepper avenues. Festival
    organizers are preparing for 7,500 to 8,000 people over four days.

    Lunch officially runs from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and dinner, from 5 to 9
    p.m. on Thursday and Friday. The big food lines close down in between,
    but Hye burgers, pastries and drinks will be available all day. "And,"
    Norris said, "anybody who comes to us and says they really want a
    chicken kebab, we're going to cook them one."

    On the weekend, the cooks don't get a break and will serve from 11
    a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday and from noon to 7 p.m. Sunday.

    Food is the star of this festival, but there will also be a silent
    auction and plenty of dancing and other entertainment.

    . . .

    If burgers aren't to your liking, go to the festival anyway. You'll
    find plenty of choices, among them beef or chicken shish kebab, rice
    pilaf, green beans, stuffed grape leaves and hummus. You'll also
    find a pie made of ground beef, tomatoes and peppers, as well as an
    Armenian bean salad made of chickpeas, tomatoes, onions and parsley.

    You'll also find traditional holiday breads and an assortment of
    pastries, including bourma, the Armenian version of what other cuisines
    call baklava or paklava. You can buy a pastry assortment for $3.

    Everything is sold ? la carte, Shish kebab is $6 for chicken and $8
    for beef. You'll find a Hye burger combo platter with Armenian rice
    pilaf and green beans for $12.
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