An ode to Armenian food and culture, Lavash is a cookbook filled with fresh and satisfying dishes served with plenty of pickles and sides, from soups and salads to mains and sweets.
Lavash features more than 60 recipes—including how to make the ubiquitous and doable flatbread lavash, the UNESCO-recognized bread of Armenia.
With stunning photography and essays, this book provides an insider's look at Armenia—a small but fascinating country comprising dramatic mountains, sun-drenched fields, and welcoming people.
• Arranged by course • Covers authentic breads and everything you eat with them • Showcases the best flavors and techniques of Mediterranean and central European cuisines
Lavash is part cookbook, part travelogue, and part lookbook of tempting food and revealing atmospheric photography.
With influences from the Middle East and the Mediterranean as well as from Russia, the food of Armenia is perfect for people who want to dig deeper into the traditions formed at the crossroads between the East and West.
• For both armchair travelers and home cooks, this book is as enticing in the reading as its recipes are to the palate • With growing interest in fermentation and the medical benefits of a Mediterranean diet, Armenian food offers a new take on healthful deliciousness • A wonderful gift for home bakers and lovers of Mediterranean and other regional cuisines • Great for those who enjoyed The Armenian Cookbook by Rachel Hogrogian, Treasured Armenian Recipes by Marie Manoogian, and Taste of Persia: A Cook's Travels Through Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran, and Kurdistan by Naomi Duguid
Kate Leahy grew up in California and learned how to cook and bake in restaurants throughout the country. Her first book, A16 Food and Wine, received the IACP Cookbook of the Year award and the Julia Child First book award. Her most recent book, Lavash, with co-authors Ara Zada and John Lee, celebrates Armenia's favorite flatbread. She lives in San Francisco
I am going to borrow this again from the library. I haven’t delved into Armenian food that much but I am very intrigued. Certain wording throws me but it’s a book I am definitely borrowing again
A really magnificent cookbook giving background on Armenian recipes and how/why they devoloped over time based on history, political changes, climate, and cultural influences. There are recipes for all levels of cooking/baking experience and quite a few sides, mains, and desserts that will work for vegetarians. You can tell the authors fell in love with the country and it's people while researching the cuisine. Highly recommended not just for the historical highlights and photographs but also for the accessibility of the recipes and notes for when/if the authors had to slightly alter a traditional ingredient or way of serving based on what might be available to those loving outside the region.
Just what a cookbook of this type should be. The recipes are based on recent, in-person research in Armenia. Thoughtful consideration is given to how one might prepare the recipes with commonly found ingredients and tools in the US (since that is the audience), with substitutions and explanations as relevant. And a concise account of the region's history, as it has impacted food and cooking, is woven throughout, giving the book a narrative feeling, although it is, of course, a book primarily intended to instruct on food preparation. Of course a great cookbook has to have lovely photos, and this one does.
WOW, I am so proud to purchase this Armenian historical cookbook. Very well done put together. I was so happy to see recipes, that I have been grown up with and lost the trail of finding the recipes. I only wish, it had more pictures for every recipe made. We are visual beings and love to see what we are cooking before hand. And if there was pictures, they were incredibly small. Otherwise, a great traditional Armenian Cookbook. Thank you :) xx
Great history and story. Recipes have clear instructions, nice pictures and a healthy mix, some I could make on my first try, and some that I would never be able to make in a thousand years.
Disappointed, many wrong information and a clear intention to erase and deny the Arab and Turkish influence in the Armenian cuisine.
When a recipe has an Arabic name just mention the Arab origin. No need to invent stories… Lahmajun is in Arabic (لحم بعجين) which means meat and dough. Matnakash is an Arabic word too (متنقش) and it means Engraved. Murabba (مربى) is also 100% an Arabic word, same for Halva, which means sweet in Arabic.
Chikufta is Turkish (çığ köfte) and it means raw kofta.
There is no shame in mentioning facts as they are, there is no shame when a country has a rich cuisine due to its history.
Conclusion : don’t write a book about a region you’re not from or didn’t do much research about it.
Made the urfa kebab. The recipes aren't really the point, though--I enjoyed the background on Armenian history and stories and photos from the country.
This is a really nice cookbook that has some little stories with each recipe on the cultural background of the dish. I recommend perusing it while listening to System of a Down.
this was an interesting read culturally but honestly there were no recipes that i wanted to make. where i live i can easily get excellent lavash though so thats probably why. Leahy and her partner give an excellent interview about the book on Good Food.