Matnakash

Matnakash (Armenian: մատնաքաշ) is a leavened traditional Armenian bread, similar to the naan. The word matnakash means "finger draw" or "finger pull", referring to the way the bread is prepared. It is made of wheat flour with yeast or sourdough starter. It is shaped into oval or round loaves with longitudinal or criss-crossed scoring. The characteristic golden or golden-brown color of its crust is achieved by coating the surface of the loaves with sweetened tea essence before baking.[1]

Matnakash
TypeBread
Place of originArmenia
Main ingredientsWheat flour; yeast or sourdough starter

Matnakash is also popular in places with large Armenian populations as a result of the Armenian diaspora.

History

Matnakash was honored in Soviet times. In the 1930s, food specialists in Soviet Armenia wanted to mark the new communist country with a more modern looking bread. The matnakash became a mass-produced urban bread. Even the bakers' patterns on the bread were re-interpreted to fit the Soviet agenda. It resembled a plowed field with rows and furrows. The bread's rim was interpreted as an agricultural field and its imprinted lines as tilled rows.[2]

gollark: Okay, go on.
gollark: Well, it would be Gibson in power, until we can run an election.
gollark: We can't conference Umnikos into the VOTE GIBSON group message, sadly.]
gollark: > I have done literally nothing to convince people to vote for meWell, you agreed to run an election, and you're at least fairly trustworthy.
gollark: But practically, I *assume* so?

See also

References

  1. Matnakash recipe on Armenian Portal in Estonia Archived 2004-11-04 at Archive.today. (in Russian)
  2. Armenian Food: Fact, Fiction & Folklore By Irina Petrosian, David Underwood - Page 35
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