After a very long walk in Volo Bog, we were famished, and my brother thought he had seen a shish-kebob restaurant in a shopping mall on our route back to the city, so we headed there and found Restaurant Ararat, "Fine Mediterranean & Armenian Cuisine."
There is an effort at decor that raises this above mere storefront: curtains draped just so, and light fixtures on the walls, and perhaps more that I was too exhausted from the walk to notice. An air of inexpensive authenticity, is how I would categorize it. The proprietress had a thick accent and a real interest in having us enjoy a good meal.
It was midafternoon, so we settled on each ordering soup from an extensive list (but only three available each day as it turned out) and several appetizers to share. With the bread, this made an excellent lunch.
Each of the soups we ordered (kharcho, khashlama, and lagman) was hot and delicious. The broth was rich and meaty, large chunks of tender lamb, peppery (whole peppercorns). Lagman noodles were thin, al dente, the texture made me wonder if they were maybe homemade. (We were sad that the green borsch was not in rotation today. I have never heard of it. The menu says: sorrel soup with beef, onions, spinach, greens, potatoes and spices. Anyone ever had this?)
The stuffed pepper salad consisted of a three-quarters inch high ring of orange bell pepper stuffed with mild and creamy feta with little bits of tomato and lots of dill mixed in, and I think a little bit of vinaigrette type dressing. The Armenian style grilled eggplant salad was excellent, smoky and delicious, with onion and tomato and not sure what else. The chebureki was perhaps the one disappointment -- Mr. H said it was like deep fried potato salad, and that pretty much captured it: a circle of dough stuffed with potato salad (?), folded over and sealed, and deep fried -- though not greasy at all, and the crust nicely crunchy. (We thought of the Minnesota State Fair.) Not necessarily bad, but we had mistakenly thought it would be burek-like, which it was not.
There was bread which I suspect was homemade, which was quite good, a dense white bread with a nice crust, served warm, and replenished when we wolfed it down.
There were four desserts, which were brought out for inspection, and we were assured they were all house made-- a Napoleon, something like cannoli, a meringue, and baklava. We chose to split a piece of baklava, and ordered Armenian coffee. The coffee was excellent. The baklava was Armenian style, not so flaky, not oozing honey, more solid and less sweet. I believe I like other baklava better, but this did hit the spot.
We did not even look at the dinner menu, so there is a lot left to explore. During the week, there are lunch specials for $6.99. Mains are about $9, a few higher. In the window, there was a card announcing pelmeni, which is one of the things that drew us in; on the menu are also manti (lamb) and khinkali (beef dumplings).
Has anyone else eaten here? It is well worth a visit, and I would love to hear what others think, as I believe this may be the first time I have eaten Armenian food. This is way off my beaten path, and I don't anticipate getting back any time soon.
Restaurant Ararat
364 Town Line Road
Mundelein, IL
847-566-9755
http://restaurantararat.com/