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The modern Armenian breakfast consists of coffee or tea, plus a spread of cheeses, jams, meats, vegetables, eggs, and breads. Armenians living in the Diaspora often adopt local customs. Thus, Armenians in Lebanon, Syria, and Egypt may include "ful" (stewed fava beans in olive oil). Traditional Armenian breakfast dishes are hearty. They included:
Usually consumed as a breakfast soup, [11] kalle-pache is traditional to Afghanistan [13] and Iran. [11] In Iran, kalle-pache is usually cooked in specialty stores, and is served in the morning. [14] It is especially consumed during cold seasons. [14] To prepare kalle-pache, the sheep's head and trotters are collected, cooked, and treated as ...
Alani (Ալանի) — Armenian sweet made from dried apricot stuffed with ground walnut and sugar. Baldzhin (Балджын) — Ossetian sweet pie filled with cherries. Churchkhela. Churchkhela (ჩურჩხელა) — Georgian sweet made from mixed grape juice and flour with chopped walnuts or hazelnuts. Gata (Գաթա) — Armenian ...
7 Food Trends That Will Dominate in 2025, According to Experts ... such as eating breakfast foods at night,” Zegler says. ... (Sosi's Spinach Jalapeno Armenian Yogurt Dip) to flavor-infused ...
Khachapuri is a popular street food in Armenia, where it is widely served in restaurants and school cafeterias. [12] It has become increasingly popular as a brunch food in Israel, where it was brought over by Georgian Jews [13] and is spreading to other parts of the world, like the United States. [14]
Armenian restaurants also serve basturma topped burgers, [40] basturma can be added to salads, [41] and basturma with omelette is also a common breakfast item in Armenia. [42] Basturma, or a basturma omelette can also be wrapped inside a lavash, alongside other ingredients like coriander , chechil cheese , and garlic matzoon .
Comedian Jack Jr. and chef Ara Zada turned their 'Arm-Mex' cuisine into a string of viral videos. Now they're bringing a live pop-up restaurant to the Haha Comedy Club on March 11.
Harees (Arabic: هريس), boko boko, or harisa (Armenian: հարիսա, romanized: harisa) is a dish of boiled, cracked, or coarsely-ground cracked wheat or bulgur, mixed with meat and seasoned. [1] Its consistency varies between a porridge and a gruel.