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Local Flavors: Hash [khash] for breakfast - it's not what you think

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  • Local Flavors: Hash [khash] for breakfast - it's not what you think

    The Associated Press
    September 30, 2005, Friday, BC cycle

    Local Flavors: Hash for breakfast - in Armenia, it's not what you
    think

    By MIKE ECKEL, Associated Press Writer

    YEREVAN, Armenia

    Cow's hoof soup for breakfast: Is this the right way to begin the
    day?

    For an American brought up on cornflakes and orange juice, the
    prospect is daunting - not to mention that the concoction is ritually
    accompanied with vodka.

    But for people in the Caucasus, it's as much of a treat as a
    champagne brunch.

    During a trip to Armenia, my colleagues Avet, Gevorg and Misha talked
    about it with the obsessive enthusiasm of stamp collectors or
    antique-car buffs. The dish seemed to have deep emotional resonance
    for them.

    After two days of listening to them, I was determined to experience
    the mystique - or at least choke down the chow, which is called hash
    (wheeze heavily on the first "h" to sound like a local).

    Just after 8 a.m., we sat down at Yerevan's Kavkaz restaurant in a
    booth of elaborately carved wood with floor-to-ceiling pictures of
    the Caucasus capitals. Avet negotiated with the waitress, then waxed
    poetic on the meaning of hash.

    "It's not just a dish. It's a union of harmony and digestion," he
    said. "From this process, you get deeper contact with the food, the
    ingredients, your culture."

    It used to be considered poor man's food: The wealthy ate the best
    parts of the cow, then threw the castoffs to the poor. Legend has it
    that children of the poor became hardier stock than those of the rich
    and the dish eventually became a classless culinary custom.

    Gevorg swore that if you broke a bone, you should eat hash five times
    a day to mend your bones faster. Misha said his Georgian grandmother
    ate hash to alleviate her arthritis.

    Appetizers arrived: parsley greens, scallions and radishes; warm
    flatbread called lavash; a plate of cold, crisp lavash; pickled
    cucumbers; and the vodka. We were on our second round of toasts at
    about the same time I'm usually on my second cup of coffee.

    Avet began building a chest-high mound of crisp lavash pieces;
    essential to the process, he said. I made a mess of it, sending
    lavash confetti everywhere. Avet, meanwhile, regaled us with
    childhood memories of having to prepare the cow's hoof by cleaning it
    of hair, dirt and manure.

    Then it arrived: two shallow, clay-fired bowls for each of us, one
    resting on the other. The lower held hot coals. The upper held a
    yellowish bouillon with puddles of oil and a six-inch piece of
    blanched bone wrapped in jiggling, yellow folds of skin.

    Avet and Gevorg called it "meat." I called it "indeterminate,
    cholesterol-enhancing meat product." I was instructed to put it aside
    and cover it with the soft lavash for later.

    We started adding lavash pieces, alternating salt with minced garlic.
    Avet added his entire mound and spent 10 minutes adjusting the salt
    and garlic taste.

    Finally, we could eat. The hash was rich and oily, but not at all
    heavy. The soggy bread gave the soup heft, while the salt and garlic
    added an unusual layer of flavors complemented by the garnishes.

    At Avet's request, the waitress brought out a plate of quarter-sized
    pieces of cow's stomach - an alternative, he said, to the standard
    cow's hoof. They were rather like undercooked chicken skin. More
    vodka seemed advisable.

    It was time, finally, for the hoof. Avet and Gevorg removed their
    lavash and began gnawing at theirs. Misha refused to touch his. I
    glared at mine.

    "Eat it! Eat it! Don't be afraid!" they said, laughing.

    The hoof was bland and extremely chewy. I gave up after several
    minutes and then was directed to nibble radishes which, along with
    the garlic, purportedly helps cut the cholesterol assaulting your
    arteries.

    I was unsure whether I'd had the true hash experience and Avet
    hastened to assure me.

    He pressed his thumb and two fingers together, then tried to pull
    them apart. They were stuck together by the gluey bouillon.

    "There you go," he said smiling. "That's some good hash."
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