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  • Siunik Makes Armenian Food More Accessible

    SIUNIK MAKES ARMENIAN FOOD MORE ACCESSIBLE
    By Kevin Pang

    Chicago Tribune
    http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/food/ct-dining-0621-cheap-eater-siunik-20120621,0,1025554.story
    June 20 2012
    IL

    You point-they assemble service at restaurant is much like Chipotle

    The first time I sunk my teeth into the pork kabobs at Siunik
    Armenian Grill, glistened in its rich semi-rendered fat, speckled
    with paprika-like dots of Aleppo peppers, it felt both welcomed and
    unfamiliar. Something seemed out of place, like discovering cheese
    at a Thai restaurant.

    The incongruence soon became clear. You never see kabobs (in the Middle
    Eastern sense) and pork together, per Halal laws. Whenever I taste
    those region-specific flavors - chickpeas, parsley, dates, yogurt - my
    mind fills in the blank with lamb or beef. But Armenia, a predominantly
    Christian country surrounded on three sides by predominantly Muslim
    countries, doesn't observe such dietary restrictions. Its sparingly
    spiced food reflects its crossroads Eurasian geography - peripherally
    Middle Eastern, Turkish and Eastern European.

    I wonder how Siunik Armenian Grill, an 8-month-old operation in
    Glenview and Skokie, tackles the uphill task of introducing an
    unfamiliar cuisine to reluctant Midwest American palates. They come
    at it from several angles.

    First, they serve items such as hummus, which is not Armenian, but
    seemingly obligatory at Middle Eastern restaurants. So owner Levon
    Kirakosyan added hummus to the menu, and his customer base grew.

    Next, they hope to frame the cuisine as unintimidating and accessible.

    I might have never stopped in Siunik if a friend hadn't described
    the restaurant as "an Armenian Chipotle." That statement's about 70
    percent accurate. At its Skokie location, all that's missing from
    the concrete floor and two-toned wood panels are the funky Mayan wall
    sculptures. Warm holding trays are stacked on the glass-partitioned
    counter, where service is you-point-and-they-assemble.

    Like Chipotle, an entree contains one each of meat, starch, vegetable,
    side and sauce, which can be wrapped in a flour tortilla-like
    lavosh flatbread, or heaped onto a plate. I'd suggest against the
    wrap option here ($5-$5.75). Unfamiliar ingredients should be tasted
    individually and not lumped into a haphazard mess. Go with the plate
    instead ($7-$9.25), where you can see the vibrancy splayed out -
    the Christmas colors of parsley and tomato tabbouleh, or chopped red
    onions with the purple, lemony powder of ground sumac.

    On my visits, there was one cashier and one cook. Here's where Chipotle
    aspiration ends and small business reality begins. A grandmotherly type
    tended the grill, rotating stainless steel skewers to order. There
    are no grab-and-go meals here. The food arrived when it did, which
    was no more than five minutes. I later found out she was Hayastan
    Kirakosyan, mother of Levon, who emigrated from Armenia six years
    ago and helps at the restaurant.

    She developed most of the dishes as a housewife. Levon said he's
    proudest of his mother's mushroom pilaf, and I'll second that - cous
    cous-like cracked wheat steeped in mushroom and onion broth. Kasha,
    too, is a family recipe: steamed buckwheat kernels, nutty and
    gluten-free, rooted in Armenia's Eastern European ancestry.

    It's a subtle thing, but I appreciate the varied textures on my plate
    avoiding one-note mushiness. There's a crunchiness to the cabbage
    salad, a crumbly crispness to the honey cake, a gentle give to the
    tender grilled meats. The made-in-house yogurt, smooth and tangy on
    the intake, provides a cool counterpoint to the hot kabobs. The first
    item listed on the menu (which I'd assume to be its proudest offering)
    is the lula kabob. It's a first cousin to kefta kabobs, ground beef
    formed into cigars that tastes like your nana's onion meatloaf. The
    cubed steak and chicken breast kabobs both retained moistness, too,
    a minor miracle. (A vegetarian plate of red beans and parsley is also
    available, as is a $4.95 weekday lunch special of chicken, steak and
    lula kabobs.)

    Among dipping sauces, lolik is a spicy marriage of tomato salsa and
    ajver, the Balkan red pepper sauce accompanying cevapcici (a second
    cousin to lula kabobs). Garmiruk isn't far off from bloody mary mix.

    Taken as a whole, a forkful from each corner of the plate, the meal
    transports you from the North Shore, though you're not exactly sure
    where it takes you. Middle Eastern? Persian Empire? A hint of Soviet?

    I found it filling and exotically ambiguous.

    Siunik Armenian Grill

    1707 Chestnut Ave., Glenview, 847-724-7800 and 4839 Oakton St.,
    Skokie, 847-329-4200

    Open: 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Monday-Saturday; 11 a.m.-7:30 p.m. Sunday. Credit
    cards accepted, though cash preferred. Most expensive entree item
    is $9.25

    Recommended: Pork kabob, combo plate, mushroom pilaf, hamov (sauteed
    eggplant), honey cake

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