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The Pickles Are on the Wall

No hamburgers in Azerbaijan.

Chef Leyla’s Cafe 21 in the Gaslamp - Image by Irvin Gavidor
Chef Leyla’s Cafe 21 in the Gaslamp

Look up Azerbaijan on the map and one can see immediately how this Caucasus country is a confluence of cultures: Persian, Russian, Islamic, seafaring, to name a few. All of these influences contribute to modern-day Azerbaijan, a secular republic bordering Iran, Russia, Armenia, Georgia, Turkey, and the Caspian Sea. Chef Leyla and her husband Alex Javadov, owners of Cafe 21 in University Heights and the Gaslamp, were born and grew up in the capital city of Baku on the Caspian Sea.

Place

Cafe 21

802 Fifth Avenue, San Diego

“People in Baku go to walk on the boulevard on the sea, like they do here,” said Leyla as she flipped through a picture book of her home country. In one nighttime shot, the lights glitter over the Bay of Baku, reminiscent of San Diego but with the minarets and domes of ancient Islamic and medieval architecture mixed in.

Azerbaijan means “land of fire” — a fitting moniker, given the fact that it is the first place where petroleum was extracted from below the surface to burn as fuel. The first mechanical oil rig in the world was constructed in the Bibi-Heybat area in 1871. But the country’s name goes back much further than that. Due to a large deposit of natural gas under the Absheron Peninsula, where Baku is located, seepage to the surface through fissures has occurred for thousands of years. Followers of Zoroastrianism, a religion that developed in the region over 2000 years ago, built what were called “fire temples” around these gas seepages. Marco Polo noted the mysterious, scintillating flames in his 13th-century travels. In the 1800s, Alexandre Dumas witnessed and wrote of the fire temples. An eternal fire, called Yanar Dag, burns just outside Baku, drawing visitors from around the world with its inner glow and colorful jets of fire.

Azerbaijan includes 9 out of the 11 climatic zones that occur on Earth and ranges in elevation from 90 feet below sea level to over 14,000 feet — all in a space about the size of Maine. This makes for great versatility in cultivation cuisine. Saffron, the delicately fragrant yellow spice, is grown in the region where Baku is located, and black caviar comes from sturgeon in the Caspian Sea. Apples, cherries, apricots, lemons, oranges, and tea grow in other regions of the country. Dried fruit accompanies many Azeri dishes, especially in winter, as do pickles of every ilk. People raise livestock in many places, even in Baku.

“It’s pretty normal to grow up on a farm,” laughed Leyla. “Both of my grandmothers did.”

“Many people provide their own ingredients,” added her husband Alex, as we talked in their downtown condo. “Or trade for what they need.”

That was the norm, even during Soviet rule, which lasted from 1920–1991 and into which Leyla and Alex were born. But the collapse of the Soviet Union caused widespread instability. People did the best they could with the scarcities. Alex remembers people drying herbs and eating lots of cabbage, beets, and potatoes. Leyla’s older sister was in charge of the cooking in their household, and Leyla — known in her family for experimenting with food — was not allowed to touch the most precious provisions.

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The kitchen island was spread with a beautiful array of traditional dishes. “I hope you’re hungry,” Leyla smiled.

She was allowed to make preserves, pickles, dried fruits, yogurt, and cheese, which she continues to do at home in her Kettner Boulevard kitchen. When I arrived, the kitchen island was spread with a beautiful array of traditional dishes — perfectly rolled dolma stuffed with fish, soft white cheese called qatik, fragrant rose jam, pickled cabbage and apples, and tandoori bread. Leyla turned on the gas under a bright red qazan — a cooking pot — and started heating the plov, a rice dish she had prepared.

“I hope you’re hungry,” she smiled.

Leyla and Alex, now proprietors of two (going on three) San Diego restaurants, bring many Azeri elements to the fare they offer their customers, adding touches of their home country to the rich offerings of California’s farms. In Azerbaijan, lamb is a staple, so Leyla features it on her menu in several preparations. When we dined in the restaurant, my husband and I sampled a succulent version atop a house-made potato pancake. There’s a kufta kebab and an apricot-braised shank, too. (We couldn’t try everything.) But we did really like the portobello fries and beet hummus. Azeri-style spices and piquant pickled cabbages accompany seasonal fruits and vegetables in many of the menu items.

These unique dishes seem to please the local palate: Cafe 21 on Adams Avenue in University Heights proved popular enough that Leyla and Alex decided to add a second location in 2011, in a tiny space on Fifth in the Gaslamp. The opportunity to move down the block to their current Gaslamp location, where Croce’s used to be, came this year. They opened in May. Leyla and Alex will also retain the small Fifth Avenue location and put in another restaurant there.

“Nature’s Kitchen,” as Leyla calls her concept, “means what’s seasonal, what’s local, what’s available.”

“Nature’s Kitchen,” as Leyla calls her concept, “means what’s seasonal, what’s local, what’s available. In Azerbaijan, that’s the norm — eat it when it’s ready and pickle or preserve the extra for later. Here in California, though we as a state do grow a wide variety of crops, we also import so many things to meet demand that it’s hard to tell what’s in season when. And where it comes from.”

Leyla and Alex’s Azeri roots show not only in the fare but also in the decor of the newest Cafe 21 location. The custom-made metal chandeliers, three feet across, echo design patterns from classic Islamic architecture. The textiles on the booths are a vibrant mix of patterns that reminded Leyla of carpets made in a mountainous region of Azerbaijan. Shelves on the restaurant’s walls display colorful house-made pickles, and hand-pressed juices line a table in the entryway. A small Azerbaijani flag waves from a shelf, next to a samovar.

Though it was “Happier Hour” when I visited the Gaslamp location and the dinner crowd was just trickling in after a hot day, it was impossible to ignore the appetizing aromas wafting through the air and the gorgeous plates piled with bright, fresh bites.

“Leyla’s presentation of the food shows how it’s different, how she cares,” Alex told us when I met them at their home. “People don’t expect the pancakes to be on a wooden board with three kinds of fruit preserves — they might expect a stack on a plate with a big blob of butter and a carafe of syrup.”

At dinner at the Javadov home, we drank homemade cowberry lemonade out of tiny, elaborately hand-painted stoneware vessels brought from Azerbaijan. The dolma, which means “wrapped,” were served on a platter painted in the same manner as the dainty vessels, with rich hues of red, blue, and yellow that brought out the earthy green of the grape leaves. A miniature, hand-fashioned metal jam pot, complete with matching petite ladle — a family heirloom — held the rose jam.

On the shelves above the stove sat a collection of hand-hammered cookware and serving pieces, on display and also meant for regular use. Unusually thick, rough-hewn wooden shelves held the shiny, variously shaped pots and pans.

“When we moved in, it was all cabinets,” said Leyla, gesturing to the shelving. “For me to be happy and comfortable in this kitchen we had to take out the storage and make it open.”

Leyla studied design in Azerbaijan, as well as economics. She also worked in a bank in Baku. She thought she would start a clothing line when she moved here. But when friends asked Alex if his wife could bake them a baklava, the cooking took over. Combined with her talent for creating delectable recipes, Leyla said that her background has helped her to succeed in the restaurant business.

And things have been tough at times. When they started out on Adams Avenue, they served brunch in the morning and then closed the restaurant for the rest of the day to do the necessary renovations themselves. Soon after they started out, they were embroiled in a difficult tenancy situation.

Leyla and Alex spend a lot of time in the restaurants, training the cooks and overseeing the details. Cafe 21 switches the menu three times a day — brunch, happy hour, and dinner — so there’s always something to do. Working in the kitchen, Leyla is dedicated to doing what she can to reduce wasted ingredients. Since they moved here, she and Alex have been amazed at the amount of food thrown away in the United States. They wanted to start composting in their downtown location, but city code makes it prohibitively complicated. So for now they focus on something they can do to make less waste — in fuel, that is: bring in ingredients from places like Suzie’s Farm in the South Bay and Tom’s Farms in Corona.

It’s been hard to implement Azeri recipes in their kitchens, admitted Leyla. Not many Azeris have relocated to San Diego. Leyla and Alex hope that one of her relatives will one day come from Azerbaijan to tend the tandoor oven they have in the restaurant.

“Leyla has a cousin who is a pro at this,” said Alex almost wistfully of their faraway relative, pointing to the plate of house-baked tandoori bread. No slicing needed — we tore it with our hands to get a nibble.

“In Azerbaijan, if you are not eating with your hands, you are not enjoying,” Leyla told us after we had eaten all the way through dessert with our forks and knives. I plucked a raspberry from the table, where it had fallen from the mascarpone pastry, and ate it with my fingers.

Since 2002, when Leyla came to join her husband here, they have been back to visit their home country a handful of times.

“It’s very friendly, very open, very family-oriented,” described Leyla of the place she grew up. “People feel safe.”

“Where I lived we had the doors always open, no locks, even though it was in the city.” Azeris joke that if something disappears from your house, “one of your relatives took it.”

While Azerbaijan has no state religion, it does have ancient Islamic roots. As a secular country, it was the first Muslim majority country to host an opera, a ballet, and other arts. Maybe, as one of many food-related Azerbaijani proverbs goes, “The mullah saw pilaf and forgot about the Koran.” Alcohol isn’t very popular in Azerbaijan on account of the Muslim influence, but, said Alex, “we learned to drink from the Russians.” Given its many borders, Azerbaijan’s families are made up of a mix of peoples and cultures. Leyla has family in nearby Ukraine.

“They are not so scared as they are sad,” Leyla said of her cousins. “They are sad about what happened in Crimea. It’s like brother fighting brother.”

As children in one of the countries that made up the U.S.S.R., Leyla and Alex both attended Soviet state-run schools, as did most of their peers, where lessons were taught in Russian. They speak a combination of Azeri and Russian.

“When Alex and I speak to each other,” Leyla laughed, “my son tells us, ‘pick one!’”

I asked their 11-year-old son if he had a chance to visit and what his impressions were.

“Yes, I’ve been to visit Azerbaijan,” he said, nodding. “There were trees with mulberries on them and…no hamburgers.”

Leyla chuckled with her husband. She had told us earlier that her son wasn’t enthusiastic about eating home-cooked meals.

“We don’t eat fast food very often — maybe once a month,” Alex assured us. Their two-year-old daughter prefers her mom’s home cooking. I’m with her.

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Chef Leyla’s Cafe 21 in the Gaslamp - Image by Irvin Gavidor
Chef Leyla’s Cafe 21 in the Gaslamp

Look up Azerbaijan on the map and one can see immediately how this Caucasus country is a confluence of cultures: Persian, Russian, Islamic, seafaring, to name a few. All of these influences contribute to modern-day Azerbaijan, a secular republic bordering Iran, Russia, Armenia, Georgia, Turkey, and the Caspian Sea. Chef Leyla and her husband Alex Javadov, owners of Cafe 21 in University Heights and the Gaslamp, were born and grew up in the capital city of Baku on the Caspian Sea.

Place

Cafe 21

802 Fifth Avenue, San Diego

“People in Baku go to walk on the boulevard on the sea, like they do here,” said Leyla as she flipped through a picture book of her home country. In one nighttime shot, the lights glitter over the Bay of Baku, reminiscent of San Diego but with the minarets and domes of ancient Islamic and medieval architecture mixed in.

Azerbaijan means “land of fire” — a fitting moniker, given the fact that it is the first place where petroleum was extracted from below the surface to burn as fuel. The first mechanical oil rig in the world was constructed in the Bibi-Heybat area in 1871. But the country’s name goes back much further than that. Due to a large deposit of natural gas under the Absheron Peninsula, where Baku is located, seepage to the surface through fissures has occurred for thousands of years. Followers of Zoroastrianism, a religion that developed in the region over 2000 years ago, built what were called “fire temples” around these gas seepages. Marco Polo noted the mysterious, scintillating flames in his 13th-century travels. In the 1800s, Alexandre Dumas witnessed and wrote of the fire temples. An eternal fire, called Yanar Dag, burns just outside Baku, drawing visitors from around the world with its inner glow and colorful jets of fire.

Azerbaijan includes 9 out of the 11 climatic zones that occur on Earth and ranges in elevation from 90 feet below sea level to over 14,000 feet — all in a space about the size of Maine. This makes for great versatility in cultivation cuisine. Saffron, the delicately fragrant yellow spice, is grown in the region where Baku is located, and black caviar comes from sturgeon in the Caspian Sea. Apples, cherries, apricots, lemons, oranges, and tea grow in other regions of the country. Dried fruit accompanies many Azeri dishes, especially in winter, as do pickles of every ilk. People raise livestock in many places, even in Baku.

“It’s pretty normal to grow up on a farm,” laughed Leyla. “Both of my grandmothers did.”

“Many people provide their own ingredients,” added her husband Alex, as we talked in their downtown condo. “Or trade for what they need.”

That was the norm, even during Soviet rule, which lasted from 1920–1991 and into which Leyla and Alex were born. But the collapse of the Soviet Union caused widespread instability. People did the best they could with the scarcities. Alex remembers people drying herbs and eating lots of cabbage, beets, and potatoes. Leyla’s older sister was in charge of the cooking in their household, and Leyla — known in her family for experimenting with food — was not allowed to touch the most precious provisions.

Sponsored
Sponsored

The kitchen island was spread with a beautiful array of traditional dishes. “I hope you’re hungry,” Leyla smiled.

She was allowed to make preserves, pickles, dried fruits, yogurt, and cheese, which she continues to do at home in her Kettner Boulevard kitchen. When I arrived, the kitchen island was spread with a beautiful array of traditional dishes — perfectly rolled dolma stuffed with fish, soft white cheese called qatik, fragrant rose jam, pickled cabbage and apples, and tandoori bread. Leyla turned on the gas under a bright red qazan — a cooking pot — and started heating the plov, a rice dish she had prepared.

“I hope you’re hungry,” she smiled.

Leyla and Alex, now proprietors of two (going on three) San Diego restaurants, bring many Azeri elements to the fare they offer their customers, adding touches of their home country to the rich offerings of California’s farms. In Azerbaijan, lamb is a staple, so Leyla features it on her menu in several preparations. When we dined in the restaurant, my husband and I sampled a succulent version atop a house-made potato pancake. There’s a kufta kebab and an apricot-braised shank, too. (We couldn’t try everything.) But we did really like the portobello fries and beet hummus. Azeri-style spices and piquant pickled cabbages accompany seasonal fruits and vegetables in many of the menu items.

These unique dishes seem to please the local palate: Cafe 21 on Adams Avenue in University Heights proved popular enough that Leyla and Alex decided to add a second location in 2011, in a tiny space on Fifth in the Gaslamp. The opportunity to move down the block to their current Gaslamp location, where Croce’s used to be, came this year. They opened in May. Leyla and Alex will also retain the small Fifth Avenue location and put in another restaurant there.

“Nature’s Kitchen,” as Leyla calls her concept, “means what’s seasonal, what’s local, what’s available.”

“Nature’s Kitchen,” as Leyla calls her concept, “means what’s seasonal, what’s local, what’s available. In Azerbaijan, that’s the norm — eat it when it’s ready and pickle or preserve the extra for later. Here in California, though we as a state do grow a wide variety of crops, we also import so many things to meet demand that it’s hard to tell what’s in season when. And where it comes from.”

Leyla and Alex’s Azeri roots show not only in the fare but also in the decor of the newest Cafe 21 location. The custom-made metal chandeliers, three feet across, echo design patterns from classic Islamic architecture. The textiles on the booths are a vibrant mix of patterns that reminded Leyla of carpets made in a mountainous region of Azerbaijan. Shelves on the restaurant’s walls display colorful house-made pickles, and hand-pressed juices line a table in the entryway. A small Azerbaijani flag waves from a shelf, next to a samovar.

Though it was “Happier Hour” when I visited the Gaslamp location and the dinner crowd was just trickling in after a hot day, it was impossible to ignore the appetizing aromas wafting through the air and the gorgeous plates piled with bright, fresh bites.

“Leyla’s presentation of the food shows how it’s different, how she cares,” Alex told us when I met them at their home. “People don’t expect the pancakes to be on a wooden board with three kinds of fruit preserves — they might expect a stack on a plate with a big blob of butter and a carafe of syrup.”

At dinner at the Javadov home, we drank homemade cowberry lemonade out of tiny, elaborately hand-painted stoneware vessels brought from Azerbaijan. The dolma, which means “wrapped,” were served on a platter painted in the same manner as the dainty vessels, with rich hues of red, blue, and yellow that brought out the earthy green of the grape leaves. A miniature, hand-fashioned metal jam pot, complete with matching petite ladle — a family heirloom — held the rose jam.

On the shelves above the stove sat a collection of hand-hammered cookware and serving pieces, on display and also meant for regular use. Unusually thick, rough-hewn wooden shelves held the shiny, variously shaped pots and pans.

“When we moved in, it was all cabinets,” said Leyla, gesturing to the shelving. “For me to be happy and comfortable in this kitchen we had to take out the storage and make it open.”

Leyla studied design in Azerbaijan, as well as economics. She also worked in a bank in Baku. She thought she would start a clothing line when she moved here. But when friends asked Alex if his wife could bake them a baklava, the cooking took over. Combined with her talent for creating delectable recipes, Leyla said that her background has helped her to succeed in the restaurant business.

And things have been tough at times. When they started out on Adams Avenue, they served brunch in the morning and then closed the restaurant for the rest of the day to do the necessary renovations themselves. Soon after they started out, they were embroiled in a difficult tenancy situation.

Leyla and Alex spend a lot of time in the restaurants, training the cooks and overseeing the details. Cafe 21 switches the menu three times a day — brunch, happy hour, and dinner — so there’s always something to do. Working in the kitchen, Leyla is dedicated to doing what she can to reduce wasted ingredients. Since they moved here, she and Alex have been amazed at the amount of food thrown away in the United States. They wanted to start composting in their downtown location, but city code makes it prohibitively complicated. So for now they focus on something they can do to make less waste — in fuel, that is: bring in ingredients from places like Suzie’s Farm in the South Bay and Tom’s Farms in Corona.

It’s been hard to implement Azeri recipes in their kitchens, admitted Leyla. Not many Azeris have relocated to San Diego. Leyla and Alex hope that one of her relatives will one day come from Azerbaijan to tend the tandoor oven they have in the restaurant.

“Leyla has a cousin who is a pro at this,” said Alex almost wistfully of their faraway relative, pointing to the plate of house-baked tandoori bread. No slicing needed — we tore it with our hands to get a nibble.

“In Azerbaijan, if you are not eating with your hands, you are not enjoying,” Leyla told us after we had eaten all the way through dessert with our forks and knives. I plucked a raspberry from the table, where it had fallen from the mascarpone pastry, and ate it with my fingers.

Since 2002, when Leyla came to join her husband here, they have been back to visit their home country a handful of times.

“It’s very friendly, very open, very family-oriented,” described Leyla of the place she grew up. “People feel safe.”

“Where I lived we had the doors always open, no locks, even though it was in the city.” Azeris joke that if something disappears from your house, “one of your relatives took it.”

While Azerbaijan has no state religion, it does have ancient Islamic roots. As a secular country, it was the first Muslim majority country to host an opera, a ballet, and other arts. Maybe, as one of many food-related Azerbaijani proverbs goes, “The mullah saw pilaf and forgot about the Koran.” Alcohol isn’t very popular in Azerbaijan on account of the Muslim influence, but, said Alex, “we learned to drink from the Russians.” Given its many borders, Azerbaijan’s families are made up of a mix of peoples and cultures. Leyla has family in nearby Ukraine.

“They are not so scared as they are sad,” Leyla said of her cousins. “They are sad about what happened in Crimea. It’s like brother fighting brother.”

As children in one of the countries that made up the U.S.S.R., Leyla and Alex both attended Soviet state-run schools, as did most of their peers, where lessons were taught in Russian. They speak a combination of Azeri and Russian.

“When Alex and I speak to each other,” Leyla laughed, “my son tells us, ‘pick one!’”

I asked their 11-year-old son if he had a chance to visit and what his impressions were.

“Yes, I’ve been to visit Azerbaijan,” he said, nodding. “There were trees with mulberries on them and…no hamburgers.”

Leyla chuckled with her husband. She had told us earlier that her son wasn’t enthusiastic about eating home-cooked meals.

“We don’t eat fast food very often — maybe once a month,” Alex assured us. Their two-year-old daughter prefers her mom’s home cooking. I’m with her.

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