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Armenian Table, The: More than 165 Treasured Recipes that Bring Together Ancient Flavors and 21st-

Armenian Table, The: More than 165 Treasured Recipes that Bring Together Ancient Flavors and 21st-
By Victoria Jenanyan Wise

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Product Description

ictoria Jenanyan Wise grew up with the flavors, scents, and seasonings of Armenian cooking-a cuisine that com-bines Mediterranean flavors with Persian and Russian accents. In her thirteenth cookbook-and her first on Armenian food -Wise collects traditional favorites and inspired contemporary variations. Recipes include: - Lavosh, Armenian pizzas, and other savory breads - Shish kebab, moussaka, and other lamb dishes - Baked and roast chicken prepared with yogurt, dill, turmeric, pomegranate, and more - Grilled mackerel with lemon and dill; red snapper stew with tomato and artichokes - Stuffed vegetables (dolmas) and stuffed grape leaves - Baklava and other fillo-pastry sweets; lemon yogurt cake; almond and rice flour pudding with toasted almond slices, and more. This authentic and warm-hearted cookbook will be met by a ready audience of Armenian-Americans, as well as lovers of Greek, Turkish, Lebanese, and other Mediterranean and Middle Eastern cuisines.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #137472 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-04-20
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 320 pages

Editorial Reviews

From the Inside Flap

A veteran cookbook author returns to her delicious culinary heritage in this savory and passionate recipe collection

Victoria Jenanyan Wise grew up with the flavors, scents, and seasonings of Armenian cooking--a cuisine that combines Mediterranean flavors with Persian and Russian accents. In her eleventh cookbook-and her first on Armenian food--Wise collects traditional favorites and inspired contemporary variations. Recipes include:
-Lavosh, Armenian pizzas, and other savory breads
-Shish kebab, moussaka, and other lamb dishes
-Baked and roast chicken prepared with yogurt, dill, turmeric, pomegranate, and more
-Grilled mackerel with lemon and dill; red snapper stew with tomato and artichokes
-Stuffed vegetables (dolmas) and stuffed grape leaves
-Baklava and other fillo-pastry sweets; lemon yogurt cake; almond and rice flour pudding with toasted almond slices, and more.
This authentic and warm-hearted cookbook will be met by a ready audience of Armenian-Americans, as well as lovers of Greek, Turkish, Lebanese, and other Mediterranean and Middle Eastern cuisines.

From the Back Cover

Advance Praise for The Armenian Table

"The Armenian Table is Mediterranean "soul food" at its best. I am only sorry that I have missed out on the Jenanyan family parties, where I could have tasted most of these dishes prepared with their well-tuned palates and passion for quality and tradition. I will cook Victoria Jenanyan Wise's recipes for myself, and with pleasure."
--Joyce Goldstein, author of Saffron Shores: Jewish Cooking of the Southern Mediterranean and Solo Suppers

"Victoria Wise shares my conviction that family and culture are best preserved and respected through the foods we share. She commemorated my family's culinary history in Annie & Margrit: Recipes and Stories from the Robert Mondavi Kitchen. Now, we have the gift of learning about, and cooking, the foods handed down to her. I can't wait to try every dish in The Armenian Table."
--Margrit Biever Mondavi


Praise for the Cookbooks of Victoria Jenanyan Wise

American Charcuterie
"A book that reads as if it had been written by your most loving and food-wise neighbor."--Gourmet Magazine

"There are very few good books about charcuterie and this one reflects all the right instincts of its author and a genuine love for food and eating."--Alice Waters, author of Chez Panisse Fruit and Chez Panisse Cooking

The Vegetarian Table: Mexico
"This is the best book I've read on vegetarian cooking. Victoria combines the big, bold flavors of Mexico with healthy, zesty food you'll want to eat every day."
--Mark Miller, author of Coyote Cafe

"Like the best haiku poetry, these recipes are startling in their simplicity and offer complex rewards."--Lorna Sass, author of Pressure Perfect and Lorna Sass' Complete Vegetarian Kitchen

The Gardeners' Community Cookbook
"A knowing and generous cook, Victoria Wise brings together a vivacious community of food lovers who swap recipes, share their gardening secrets, tell stories, and reveal their passion for growing and cooking the best." --Marion Cunningham, author of Lost Recipes and The Supper Book

The Pressure Cooker Gourmet
" This book and the pressure cooker will become "must haves" in the kitchen of any smart cook who wants gourmet meals in half the time."--Diane Phillips, author of The Ultimate Rotisserie Cookbook and The Soup Mix Gourmet

About the Author

Victoria Jenanyan Wise is the author of twelve successful cookbooks, including the bestselling The Well-Filled Tortilla (co-authored with Susanna Hoffman), The Gardeners' Community Cookbook, and, most recently, The Pressure Cooker Gourmet. She lives in Oakland, California.


Customer Reviews

bad purchase1
Expensive, cheaply presented. Hardly any pictures inside , recycled paper.Too much about her family... not worth the buy nor the recepies. Not quite a good Armenian RECIPE cookbook.SORRY.....

Very Good Evocation of Another East Med. Cuisine5
Ms. Victoria Jenanyan Wise, a highly experienced cookbook author from an Armenian family has successfully blended traditional products of the Armenian terroir with modern California style and market to give us a taste of what Armenian cuisine tastes like in our American setting. As this objective is not the same as a faithful evocation of the native Armenian cuisine, it is important you do not buy this book with the intention of faithfully recreating your own Armenian culinary heritage. Ms. Wise is giving us her Armenian culinary heritage, not an anthropological document.

She is delightfully successful in evoking the Jenanyan memory of Armenian cuisine with recreations of Armenian recipes, family interpretations of Armenian recipes, and her own deft experiments with Armenian methods and ingredients as interpreted by what is available in the California marketplace.

Ms Wise scores her first points with me by including a map of the historical Armenia and its surrounding lands which primarily includes Asia Minor (Turkey), the Caucasus, Syria, Iraq, and Iran. Armenia today is on the eastern edge of Turkey, with parts of ethnic Armenia being in Azerbaijan. One of the little mysteries of the book is how this terroir can be considered 'Mediterranean' since it is a good 500 miles from the Bosporus, where the Black Sea empties into the Mediterranean. Although the author doesn't invoke this justification, she is in good company, as Paula Wolfert has included Georgia, which is north of Armenia and even further from the Mediterranean in a book of Eastern Mediterranean cuisines. Wise rationalizes the importance of Armenian cuisine by pointing out that the Armenian highlands are very fertile, a rich land for growing wheat, and possibly the historical origin of wheat culture.

Armenia shares some major culinary elements with lands bordering the Mediterranean such as yogurt, wheat, lamb, and eggplant. On the other hand, olives and olive oil, the cornerstone of Mediterranean cuisine is less important than butter, especially clarified butter, in Armenian cooking.

Since this is neither genuine Armenian nor purely Mediterranean, what is the attraction of this book. In a word, it is variety. If you are especially fond of the cornerstone Armenian ingredients (yogurt, lamb, eggplant, bulgar and legumes, and you are tired of your Italian, Greek, and Levantine sources, this is the book for you. The chapter subjects are a mix of the traditional and the quintessentially Armenian. These are:

Yogurt - Ms. Wise gives us the whole picture, including a reliable recipe for making homemade yogurt, and yogurt substitutes for staples such as fresh cheese, crème fraiche, and bechamel sauce. She also gives us the important caution that although you can start a yogurt culture from a commercial yogurt, the dry yogurt starter from a health foods store will give you better results. Take that Alton Brown.

Armenian Mazas - The Armenian take on the Greek and Turkish Meze cuisine. The stars here are eggplant, chickpeas, tomatoes, onions, pickling cucumbers, and zucchini. One surprise is in the recipe for string cheese.

Breads and Savory Pastries - The signature product here is 'Lavosh', the Armenian Cracker Bread which is dry like matzo, but leavened with yeast like pita, and baked with a covering of sesame seeds. Pita and Armenian 'pizzas' are also present, along with several fillo based Greek / Turkish like savory packets.

Salads - Old World style, but New World ingredients are emphasized here. Legumes and spinach are the stars here, along with the old war-horse Taboulleh.

Kufta - One of the most distinctly Armenian dishes in the book. This is less a dish than a whole family of dishes, closely related to the Georgian dish, Kibbeh, described in Paula Wolfert's 'The Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean'. Part of what makes Wolfert's book great while this volume is merely good is the fact that Wolfert gives detailed, diagrammed instructions on techniques for making Kibbeh while Wise simply gives us many different recipes and a small sidebar of tips. Both Kufta and Kibbeh are a style of cooking which puts all sorts of different ingredients, from meats to barley to bulgar to legumes into a stuffed or not stuffed 'meatball'.

Lamb and other Meats - This is how to do Shish Kebab right, and other tales of lamb cookery. An interesting ethnic tidbit here is that while Armenians were Christian, Muslim lands surrounded them, so they had little interest in pork, even if they had no religious inhibitions against it.

Poultry, Game, and Eggs - This is a chapter that will give relief to a tired inventory of poultry recipes.

Fish and Seafood - Another Old World style blended with modern techniques and sensibilities. Focus is on fresh water fish and shellfish.

Vegetables - Eggplant, Eggplant, and more Eggplant. I just wonder how okra got to Armenia from Africa.

Pilafs - Bulgar, rice, lentils and nuts.

Sweets - Baklava is the headliner, even though the author admits it is no more Armenian than Pizza. Filo dough, peaches, apricots, almonds, walnuts, and pistachios star here. Great source of nut nutrition here.

Like many other ethnically oriented cookbooks by skilled culinary authors, this one offers new, nutritious, dishes to Armenians, foodies on the lookout for novelty and vegetarians on the lookout for novelty. This is a very good book that succeeds in its objective, but it is not a great book. The anecdotes of family history are pleasant, but do not have the evocative power of, for example, some of the stories told by Gennaro Contaldo in 'Passione'. On the other hand, 'Gourmet' magazine has declared Eastern Mediterranean cuisines as one of the next big things in eating. This book is as good a source as many.

Highly recommended for those with an interest in this cuisine and in Eastern Mediterranean food in general. Relatively easy recipe methods. Very good price for the quality of the content.