From slow-cooked harissa and smoky khorovats to cheesy boreg and sweet ponchik — every Armenian recipe your kitchen needs, in one place.
Armenian cuisine is one of the oldest culinary traditions in the world — shaped by thousands of years of history, geography, and culture. From the smoky mangal of a summer khorovats to the slow simmer of a winter khash, from the delicate layers of a cheese boreg to the sweetness of a fresh-baked gata, Armenian food is how families come together, how culture is passed down, and how home is remembered — no matter how far away you are. Every recipe here has been written to help you bring that table to life.
Armenian cuisine is one of the oldest continuous food traditions in the world. Shaped by the Caucasus Mountains, the Anatolian plateau, the Silk Road, and centuries of diaspora, Armenian food is deeply layered — earthy and bright, hearty and delicate, always generous. If you've grown up in an Armenian household, these dishes are memory. If you're discovering Armenian cooking for the first time, they're a revelation.
Every Armenian kitchen revolves around a handful of essentials: fresh herbs (parsley, cilantro, mint, tarragon), bulgur wheat, lentils, lamb and pork, dried fruits, walnuts, pomegranate, and lavash. These ingredients appear across nearly every category — from the herb-packed jingalov hats to the fruit-studded ghapama to the walnut-stuffed topig. Armenian cooking is not flashy, but it is deeply intentional.
Three cooking methods define Armenian cuisine more than any others. The mangal (charcoal grill) is the heart of khorovats — Armenian BBQ that can anchor a gathering of two or two hundred. The slow pot is the soul of harissa and khash — dishes that require hours but reward patience with extraordinary depth. And the oven belongs to the bakers: the boreg-makers, the choreg-braiders, the ponchik-fryers who fill Armenian bakeries every morning.
In Los Angeles — home to the largest Armenian diaspora community outside Armenia — Armenian food has thrived and evolved. Glendale's Armenian bakeries still sell fresh gata and ponchik. Catering companies bring khorovats to every outdoor celebration. Grandmothers still make dolma the way their grandmothers did. And a new generation of Armenian-American cooks is bringing these recipes to wider audiences online and in restaurants. Find Armenian-owned restaurants near you in our Restaurants & Cafes directory.