Manti Mania

Grandmother Hajigul NER096.jpg

Please check out the ingredients for our next Saturday’s Manti Mania event, run by Nouritza Matossian and Tatiana der Avedissian.

Here is a shopping list from Nouritza, who learned how to make manti from her grandmother Hadjigul Nersessian.


To make the Garnish:

1/2 pint of stock

 2 cloves garlic, crushed

1/2 pint Greek yogurt

1/2 pint tomato passata 

1tsp Sumach

 (from Greek or Middle Eastern grocers is essential)

Hot Cayenne pepper if liked

Ingredients for the Pasta:

1 lb plain flour

(For Gluten-free, use buckwheat with a mixture of other gluten free flours and bind with egg)

1/2 pint water

Pinch of salt

1 Tablespoon cooking oil

 

For the Filling:

1lb minced beef or lamb

2 medium onions

Salt and black pepper


Directions

Combine the flour, water, salt and oil, and knead well to make a smooth dough.

Mix the minced meat with the onions, salt and pepper. Roll out one third of the dough to the thickness of a 10p coin (20mm).

Cut into squares 1½ inches then sprinkle generously with flour. Take a square and a dab ¼ tsp of meat filling in the centre.

Take two corners in your left thumb and forefinger and two in the right and lift and pinch round the meat to make a boat, then press downwards to flatten the bottom. Repeat.

Put the boats into a large, shallow, circular ovenproof dish which you have oiled, arranging them in even circles. Sprinkle the boats with cooking coil and bake at 160 (325) for 20 minutes until meat is rosy.

Beat together the yoghurt and crushed garlic; warm through gently.

Dribble thinly over the boats. Sprinkle with sumach. Serve hot with Tomato sauce.

Heat the olive oil and add the puree and water. Let it simmer and reduce a little. serve warm with some yoghurt dribbled over the surface.

To make the Tomato sauce:

1 tbsp Olive oil

2 tbsp tomato puree

½ pint water



Images: Courtesy of Nourtiza Matossian, her personal archives and from Memories of Armenia article, published in Country Homes & Interiors magazine, March 1989


Mante

This recipe is from Armenian Cuisine by Aline Kamakian and Barbara Drieskens: Cookery book from the Mayrig Restaurant, Beirut, Lebanon, introduced by Arda Eghiayan.


My birthday celebrations have become a chance for my friends to try fabulous Armenian and Middle-Eastern cuisine. The problem would come when they would ask me what was in each dish and I would struggle to find the English word for the spice or the grain—this book would have very much come in handy.

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Armenian Cuisine, by the founders and chefs at the Mayrig restaurant in Beirut, has brought to market a stunning cookery book which would be a wonderful coffee table book in itself, but for the fact that it will get quickly stained by food through overuse. The chapters are typically divided by ingredient but more interestingly, throughout the book are interviews regarding the cuisine in a different region of historic Armenia and their specialties such as Urfa, Musa Ler and Cilicia, bringing together in one book dishes that remind me of my Lebanese—Armenian grandmother but also my Cypriot-Armenian grandmother and their cooking traditions. Like the best of these women, all the measurements are in cups and you can easily end up cooking for 20 people with one recipe—the only way for us.

Interspersed throughout the book are explanations on the ingredients—the garmir biber that we all know and love but I could not for the life of me find an English equivalent. In addition, are also some beautiful photos of food, landscape and the writer of the book and their families—as I say a coffee table book as much as an incredible cookbook.


Ingredients


Stuffing:

1/3 kg minced beef (twice minced and half fat)

2 onions, chopped

½ teaspoon salt

1/3 teaspoon seven spices

1/3 teaspoon red pepper powder

¼ teaspoon black pepper

Dough:

2 cups flour

2/3 cup water

1 teaspoon salt


Yoghurt:

3 cloves of garlic crushed

1 cup strained yoghurt

1/2 cup of water

Some sumac powder for garnishing

Sauce:

1 tablespoon butter

2 cups meat stock (or 1 cube solved in ½ l of water)

½ tablespoon tomato paste

½ tablespoon hot red pepper paste

Salt


Preparation

2h30 preparation time | 5 Portions

Blend the flour with the water and salt and knead together until you obtain a smooth mixture.

Let the dough rest for 1 hour.

Combine the ingredients of the stuffing and knead them together.

Open the dough and roll it into a thin flat surface (1 to 2 mm) and cut into squares of 5 x 3 cm. Place half a teaspoon of stuffing on each patch of dough and fold the rectangular in two, pressing the corners together. Then squeeze the sides under the corners together and inward to form a little boat.

Arrange the dumplings on a baking dish covered with a thin layer of sunflower oil. Place in the oven (preheated on 350°C) until they become golden.

Prepare the sauce by melting the butter on low heat and mixing it with the pepper and tomato paste. Add 2 cups of meat stock and some salt according to taste. When the mixture boils, remove it from heat and keep it warm.

Mix the yoghurt with the crushed garlic and dilute with some water to obtain a fluid mixture. Just before serving, pour the sauce over the dumplings, cover with a thick layer of yoghurt and sprinkle with sumac.

Or: place the mante in individual plates and serve the sauce and the yoghurt on the side so that each one can add sauce and yoghurt according to his or her taste.



And here are some images of Gagik Stepan-Sarkissian’s mante:


By Arda Eghiayan