The Fresh Loaf

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Food Excursion to Watertown Massachusetts

varda's picture
varda

Food Excursion to Watertown Massachusetts

Last week, Lynnebiz and I decided that since we weren't likely to get to Viet Nam or other exotic locales anytime soon, we would explore close to home.   So we took a food excursion to Watertown, Massachusetts.    Watertown, like all the towns around here, was settled by Europeans in the 1600s - in fact in 1630 only ten years after the original European settlement at Plymouth.   However, its face is continually changing as wave after wave of immigrants arrives.   This makes it particularly attractive for people who love good bread, and authentic food in general.    Today it is an ordinary middle class workaday town just outside of the city of Boston.   After having worked in downtown Boston for a couple or years, I thought I was being exiled to Siberia when I got a new job in Watertown - but I quickly found that I could eat better in Watertown than I had in Boston.   That was ten years ago, and if anything the situation has only gotten better.    The first stop on our excursion was to Arax, an Armenian grocery.

Workaday street by Arax Market

Wall of spices at Arax - remind me never to buy spices in the supermarket again

Second we went a few doors down to the Massis Bakery, also Armenian.   There we found:

 

cracker bread and pistachio treats

No, that's not a bagel - it's around 10 inches in diameter.

And my "travel" companion:

We moved on to an Iranian Bakery which was too dark inside to get much, but the window tells you something in itself -

and down the street to Sofra's which I'm told is some American entrepreneur's foray into the market:

They have interesting spices too - I got za'atar here for my Tunisian bread. 

I hope that Lynne will post too.   We went to several more places, and I didn't get everything.    So yes, the North End is nice, but so is this, and less on the beaten track. 

Comments

SylviaH's picture
SylviaH

What a fun day and spices galore!

Sylvia

varda's picture
varda

Thanks Sylvia.   We had a great time, even though we got in everyone's way taking pictures.   We had lunch at a falafel joint where the owner told us he was Armenian, had worked in Syria (or in a Syrian restaurant - I didn't quite get it) and made Israeli style falafel. 

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

When we lived in Newton, the Armenian bakeries in Watertown were a regular stop for peda bread and Lahmajoons. Peda is wonderful for shish kabob sandwiches. Also for garlic bread.

BTW, the pastries you labeled "cashew treats" look more like pistachios to me.

David

varda's picture
varda

Not thinking straight (as usual.)   I'll update.   I didn't buy the Peda or Lahmejun.   I did come home with a flat bread called Za'atar bread, which was true to its name and delicious.   I also got a bread called Matnakhash.   It didn't taste so good until I toasted it, and then yum.   I meant to post this picture earlier: