Menu from Armenian Taverna & Restaurant
Check out the menu(s)
Menu highlights
Includes dishes that are:
Vegetarian
Spicy lentil Soup
Kofta
Balls of spicy minced lamb, mixed with onions tomatoes and Armenian spices
Octopus
Delicately marinated and char-grilled, served with special sauce
Khozy Mater
Charcoal grilled pork ribs
Shashlik
lamb chops delicatly marinated with special spices
Nur Havi
Chicken breast marinated in pomegranite sauce
Dolma
Vine leaves stuffed with mincemeat, rice, onions and herbs served with jajuk
More about the restaurant: Armenian Taverna & Restaurant
At the Albert Square end of Princess Street, before it descends into drunken, school-leaver silliness by the Village, is a restaurant that is old enough to be the dad of those A-level celebrating teens. Established in 1968, Armenian Taverna is one of Manchester’s oldest restaurants. This tiny spot in the centre of town is unassuming-looking, but the menu is anything but. Bringing the meaty, flavoursome dishes that define Armenian cooking to Mancunians for nearly fifty years.
Frequently asked questions
Does the restaurant Armenian Taverna & Restaurant have parking?
Can I pay with a credit card at Armenian Taverna & Restaurant restaurant?
Thinking about making a Armenian Taverna & Restaurant booking?
Mancunians (and Brummies, Geordies, Scousers and everyone else for that matter) will tell you that the British media is London-centric to a fault. The northern dining scene is overlooked in favour of the (more readily accessible) restaurants on the national press’ doorstep. Consider for a moment then that Albert Square’s Armenian Taverna has featured in that most North-London metropolitan elite of all North-London metropolitan elite broadsheets, The Guardian. Yes, Princess Street’s own Armenian Taverna managed to lure The Guardian’s food critic up north and was rewarded with effusive praise. But if knitted cottage cheese fans are not enough to impress, the food here certainly will.
The food at Armenian Taverna is enough to convert the neighsayers, put off by the Princess Street’s restaurant’s retro interior. Once diners have found Armenian Taverna (something that can be tricky even for native Mancs) they are treated to a menu of meaty delights and vegetarian delectables. The food is hearty, filling and above all else tasty – this is not a restaurant that fits easily with modern Manchester’s stark minimalism, and that might well be its biggest charm. The food comes first here, and for diners around Albert Square, they can rest assured that after nearly 50 years in the business the team at Armenian Taverna know exactly what they’re doing.
