Armenian Manti Recipe: Baked, Open Dumplings with Lamb or Beef (2024)

~Jamie Lynne Grumet


I’ve been around my mom making manti since I could remember, but this time I was actually going to learn to replicate it at home. Though we have always used beef, apparently, true Armenian manti uses lamb– which I am a fan of, but my mom is not. Here is my mom’s recipe for delicious manti.

Ingredients

Manti Dough

1 egg
1/3 c water
1/8 tsp salt
2 T melted butter
1 1/2 cups plus 2 T flour

In a food processor, combine egg, water, salt, and butter. Process it until well mixed. Add the flour and process it until the mixture forms a ball. If it’s too sticky, add a bit more flour. When the dough is done it should feel like your earlobe.

Turn the dough out on a lightly floured board and knead a bit (about a minute) until the dough is smooth and elastic. Cover the dough with plastic wrap or a towel and let it rest while you are making filling.

Manti Filling

1/2 lb ground beef (It’s customary to use lamb, but you will all love the beef)
1 onion, chopped very fine
1/4 cup or so, finely chopped parsley
1 or 2 cloves of minced garlic
1/2 tsp salt& 1/8 tsp pepper
2-4 T salted butter, melted; used to drizzle on just before putting in oven

Combine the meat, onion, parsley, garlic, salt, and pepper and mix until well-blended.

Yogurt Sauce

2 cups (at least) of plain greek yogurt (we like the fa*ge brand)
1 or 2 cloves of minced garlic
1/4 tsp salt, or more to your liking….we use more, of course!

Combine ingredients and refrigerate until serving time.

Broth

I have never used the broth recipe, but some people use the following:

3 cans of beef broth (or homemade), or chicken broth
a couple T of ketchup
a splash of Tabasco sauce

Assembling the Manti:

(First of all picture the end result in your mind so you see where we’re going with this. They look like little fat canoes with a ball of meat in them).

On a lightly floured board, roll out half the dough at a time to form a 9 inch square about 1/8 inch thick. Cut dough into 1 1/2 inch squares. Note: I just roll out some dough to the right thickness as long as you get little squares to fill.

I take a baby spoon and fill about 1/2 tsp of filling on each square. Then pinch the two opposite ends tightly. It now should look like a little boat with the meat inside! As each manti is formed, put it meat side up in the prepared pan. You can put them fairly close together, as long as they aren’t touching.
Ok, now you can leave this part out, but it’s not going to taste as good as mine!…drizzle the melted butter over the manti!

Bake them on the middle rack in the oven on 350 for about 35 minutes. I check them after about 25 minutes. The dough should be browning, but don’t let the bottoms start burning. Cool them on the pan.

Although, completely good on their own…..we serve it in a bowl with the broth, garlic yogurt, and topped with slowly grilled “crispy” onions. Take 1 chopped yellow onion and slowly cook in a saute pan in……butter! It takes some time so start this early in the preparation of the manti. Cook it until it is caramelized and nice and brown a little crispy. This is the “garnish” you put on top of the yogurt sauce.

I personally like it with less water and lots of yogurt sauce on top, but Daddy likes more water with yogurt sauce mixed together, and then he adds the manti.

I would have taken a picture, but we ate them all before I could get my camera out! Here is my mom and me making monta in the same kitchen when I was a child.

Do you have a special dish you remember making as a child? What dishes are you passing on to your children?

Jamie Lynne Grumet, mom to 2 adorable little boys, writer of the popular I am Not the Babysitter blog, and founder of the Fayye Foundation. She is passionately supportive of the efforts of organizations like Fayye Foundation and Awassa Children’s Project to fight both the orphan and AIDS crises in Ethiopia. Jamie and her mom are sharing their recipe of manti/monti, an Armenian dish that their entire family loves.

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Armenian Manti Recipe: Baked, Open Dumplings with Lamb or Beef (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between Armenian and Turkish manti? ›

Unlike all other regional varieties of manti, whether served with or without yogurt Armenian manti is always baked and crunchy, never just steamed or boiled. A popular type of Turkish mantı is known as Kayseri mantısı, a cultural marker of the Central Anatolian city Kayseri.

What is the difference between dumplings and manti? ›

Manti are a type of dumpling hailing from Central Asia, commonly eaten in such countries as Turkey, Kazakhstan, and northwestern China. Food historians surmise that the dish may have originated during the reign of the Mongol Empire, with references to these dumplings dating as far back as the year 1330.

What are the different types of Turkish manti? ›

In Turkish cuisine, some famous mantı dishes are Kayseri and Sinop styles of mantı. Sinop mantı is traditionally served with walnuts which is surprisingly a delicious combination! Kayseri mantı is rolled out as a thin pasta dough, which is then filled with spiced beef or lamb and onion.

What is manti dough made of? ›

Manti starts with making a simple dough from flour, eggs, salt and water. The ingredients are stirred a bit with a fork and then kneaded by hand until a firm dough is formed. It takes about ten minutes of kneading.

What is the most famous Armenian dish? ›

The most important and special dish of every Armenian table is the barbecue/khorovats.

What are the two types of Armenians? ›

The Armenian diaspora is divided into two communities – those communities from Ottoman Armenia (or Western Armenia) and those communities which are from the former Soviet Union, independent Armenia and Iran (or Eastern Armenia).

What is Turkish beef called? ›

Pastirma or Pasterma, also called pastarma,pastırma, pastourma, basdirma, basterma, basturma, or aboukh is a highly seasoned, air-dried cured beef that is found in the cuisines of Albania, Armenia, Romania, Bulgaria, Egypt, Greece, Cyprus, Iraq, the Levant, North Macedonia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey.

What are the 5 ingredients that are most commonly consumed in Turkish cuisine? ›

Tomatoes, eggplants, onions, zucchini, cucumber and garlic are the main vegetables found in Turkish cooking. They're used in everything from dips and salads to fritters and casseroles.

What does manti mean in Turkish? ›

Noun. manti (plural manti or manties) A type of dumpling served in Turkish and Central Asian cuisine quotations ▼

How do you cook manti? ›

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil over medium-high heat, and cook the manti until the filling is no longer pink, and the dough is tender, 20 to 25 minutes. Drain well. Divide the manti among four plates. Spoon the yogurt sauce over the manti and drizzle each serving with the hot pepper oil.

What is the origin of manti dumplings? ›

Manti dumplings are believed to have originated in Central Asia, specifically in the region that is now modern-day Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan. The dish has a rich history that dates back to the ancient Silk Road.

What is dumpling dough made of? ›

From-scratch dumpling dough requires only two ingredients — flour and water — and the water temperature yields different types of wrappers. Cold water is best for boiled dumplings because it causes the flour's proteins to form the gluten that makes dough chewy and able to withstand vigorously boiling water.

Are Turkish and Armenian similar? ›

While Armenian and Turkish belong to distinct language families, their similarities today should come as no surprise. Western Armenian—the language spoken by Armenians in the Ottoman Empire and their descendants around the world—rubbed shoulders with Turkish for more than four centuries.

Is Armenian and Turkish food similar? ›

Allow me to clarify: While Middle Eastern countries like Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon offer similar recipes, the taste varies due to distinct spices and cooking techniques. However, both Turks and Armenians enjoy the same dishes, even sharing names for them!

Are Turkish and Armenian related? ›

However, the original Turks originated near Mongolia while the Armenians are one of the original inhabitants of the Caucasus Mountains. Linguistically they are unrelated, Turkish is a Turkic language. Whereas Armenian is an Indo-European language.

What are Armenians from Turkey called? ›

Armenians in Turkey (Turkish: Türkiye Ermenileri; Armenian: Թուրքահայեր or Թրքահայեր, T'urk'ahayer lit. 'Turkish Armenians'), one of the indigenous peoples of Turkey, have an estimated population of 50,000 to 70,000, down from a population of over 2 million Armenians between the years 1914 and 1921.

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