Armenia Travel Guide - Going Out

 

 


Food and Drink

A restaurant and cafe culture is starting to flourish in Armenia, with street stalls and privately run establishments replacing the colourless state restaurants typical of the Soviet era. New cafes and restaurants open daily. Many of the cafes are in parks, and are very popular in summer with locals and tourists alike.

Things to know:
Much Armenian cooking is based on lamb, either grilled and served as shashlik with flat bread, or prepared as soup (the most popular being bozbash, a dish which exists in infinite variations) or stew, often in combination with fruit or nuts. A meal usually starts with a large spread of hors d’oeuvres, which may include peppers and vine leaves stuffed with rice and meat, pickled and fresh vegetables, salty white sheep’s cheese eaten with fresh green herbs and flat bread, and various kinds of cured meat (basturma).

During the season following the grape harvest, locals sell effervescent, mildly fermented grape juice from roadside stands. Armenia is also abundant in all kinds of sweet-tasting fruits, from figs to pomegranates to quince. Coffee is served Turkish-style (strong and black in tiny cups) although in view of national sensibilities, visitors would be ill-advised to refer to this cultural similarity.

National specialties:
Sharots (Sujukh) is cooked with grape juice and a dark cherry-coloured syrup called doshab.
Shampours are skewers that are jam-packed with all kinds of marinated meat and vegetables.
Ghapama is pumpkin stew with rice, raisins, apples and cinnamon.
Khash is a national institution rather than just a dish, with poems and songs throughout the centuries being composed in homage to it: in case you are wondering, khash is a delicious broth made from hamhocks and herbs and served with lots of garlic and bread.
• For dessert, eat a dish made from grape juice, dried into thin sheets of a deep, reddish brown colour, and then rolled up into long cylinders around walnuts or other nuts.

National drinks:
• Brandies are exceptional (Dvin).
Kotayk and Kihikia are Armenian beers worth giving a go.
• Armenian wine is well worth tasting: the Areni red wine is particularly lauded and many are semi-sweet or dessert wines and are world-renowned.

Legal drinking age:
There is no minimum.

Tipping:
Expected by waiters and doormen in restaurants – sometimes in advance to ensure service.

Nightlife

There are restaurants and nightclubs featuring local music in Yerevan. There are several restaurants, clubs and discos. There are several casinos. Opera, theatre and ballet performances are of a high standard, and tickets are cheap. Armenians love music, from the traditional, liturgical songs (Sharakans) with distinctive musical instruments, to contemporary jazz and pop. There will often be venues accommodating for this at night. There are often concerts at the Philharmonic, Chamber Music Hall and Opera & Ballet House in Yerevan.

Shopping

Although Armenia’s economy is still relatively undeveloped, new shops are now opening. The Vernisaj flea market in Yerevan attracts sellers of all kinds of goods and is popular with tourists.

Shopping hours: Mon-Fri 0900-1700. Shops stay open longer in the summer.




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