The annual gathering of all the cousins is a major event, and the crowd is growing, because of weddings, and even the announcement of a new cousin or grandchild, depending on your point of view, so the happiness will continue.

With the retirement of a local caterer, my cousin took it upon herself and one of the others to learn how to make boregs (phyllo stuffed pies), both cheese filling and meat lamb filling, as well as Lahmajoon, the classic Armenian pizza for a lack of better description. She also made stuff grape leaves, plus a large charcuterie board. Another major hit in the appetizers was an item that I had found on social media, Basturmah and String Cheese in a woven pastry. Now Basturmah is like a earlier and distant cousin to Pastrami, only much more pungent. Did I mention that we brought some wine. The first wine was Gran Passione Rosso Veneto 2020, a limited production wine made by Cantine Bertoldi. Cantine Bertoldi is known for their Valpolicella and Amarone wines. They were founded in 1932 and several generations later they now own fifty acres of hand-cared vineyards. They are now part of the larger umbrella wine producer and distributor Casa Vinicola Botter. They began selling local Veneto wines in 1928. After World War II, they moved onto bottled wines and started exporting. Now in their third generation, ninety percent of their business is done overseas. The soil of the estate is basically clay, and this wine is a blend of sixty percent Merlot and forty percent Corvina. The grapes selected for this wine are hand selected and harvested, allowing for the grapes to dry on the vine, reducing the weight by about fifty percent. This technique is in the tradition of Apasimento (to dry and shrivel), just like how Amarone is made. After harvest, the over-ripe grapes are destemmed and undergo maceration and fermentation for fifteen days on the skins, and then malolactic fermentation occurs in the barrel aging. This intense purple color wine offered notes of black raspberry, black cherry, cassis, black tea and dried violet blossoms. On the palate this medium-bodied, well-balanced wine had intense flavors of black fruits, blending with supple tannins and finishing with long-count finish of fruit and terroir.

For the dinner, my cousin had a caterer set up in a garage stall to smoke and roast lamb for a myriad of Armenian dishes that everyone was encouraged to create. There were salads, vegetables, sauces, sides and enough of everything to make the table and the dishes sag from all the weight. My grandparents and all the deceased parents and relatives, I am sure they were looking down at us with total approval. Suffice it to say that I couldn’t even avail myself of all of the wonderful desserts that followed. The second bottle that I opened has become one of my Bride’s favorite wines, and she never liked this varietal until she had this wine, and I think that we still have four cases left; and I have never mentioned it. I am talking about Elyse Winery Zinfandel Dry Creek Valley, Sonoma County 2019. Nancy and Ray Coursen arrived in California from Cape Cod to fulfill Ray’s dream of making wine in 1983. He began working at Mt. Eden Winery, Tonella Vineyard Management and then Whitehall Lane Winery. In 1985 he started the Elyse brand, their daughter Elyse Sarah was born in 1986, and in 1997 they purchased a small winery. This wine is made in one of the smallest AVAs in California, and Dry Creek Valley is known for its climate, and well-drained soils. Carreras Vineyard is famed for their ancient hundred-year-old Zinfandel vines. This deep black-purple wine offered notes of blackberry, peppercorns and coffee beans. On the palate this medium-to-full bodied wine displayed tones of mixed black and red berries, blending with velvety tannins and ending with a long-count finish of fruit and terroir.

Everyone was having a wonderful time, and it was great to sit back and have some great conversations and remember the old days. As always, there are some that couldn’t make it. A true joy, especially to relive the egg battles, and watching how big the children’s eyes got when they received their own Easter baskets. Just getting a group shot was amazing to observe. Our hostess looked great in what I called her vintage Carmen Miranda headdress. I know that we are looking forward to next year’s gathering.


























