122 goodthingsmagazine.com
A
s the frontier between Europe
and Asia, where caravans and
camels stopped along the
silk road in ancient times,
Georgia offers a rich, complex cuisine
which blends together Middle Eastern,
Mediterranean and Slavic flavours.
Thanks to distinct microclimates, the
country has a stagering 62 varieties of
cheese, a different type of khachapuri
bread for each region, time-honoured
food traditions in remote mountain areas,
and local markets which burst with the
Caucasus country’s immense diversity
of fruit and vegetables.
And then there are the 525 indigenous
grape varieties, and an ancient 8,000
year-old wine-making tradition that
claims to be the oldest in the world –
making Georgia the birthplace of the
much-loved tipple.
Here are just 12 good reasons to visit...
- CHERRIES FROM HEAVEN
Harvested from the Kakheti and
Guria regions in June, sour, tart and
sweet cherries are Georgia’s secret
culinary weapon. Along with sloes and
pomegranates, they’re used as a base for
savoury sauces, appear in dumplings, are
dried and added to meat dishes, and made
into sweetmeats like cherry muraba. - KHINKALI DUMPLINGS^
Pay your respects to the country’s most
famous finger food (introduced to Georgia
by the Tartars in the 13th century) with
a meal at one of its many sakhinkles (or
khinkali houses). The perfect dumpling
is said to have 19 pleats, which you should
devour by grabbing its kudi – topknot
- and slurping down the boiling broth
before consuming the juicy meat.
- SWEET CHURCHKHELA
Once used as a sugary rush by the
Georgian military, these colourful
confections are the local candy of choice.
Mistaken by tourists for sausages or
candles, the protein-packed, hanging
truncheons are made from strands
of threaded walnuts encased in waxy
sheaths of dried, concentrated grape juice. - THE MOTHER OF GEORGIA
Watching over Old Tbilisi from the slopes
of Sololaki hill is the aptly-named Mother
of Georgia statue, also known as Kartlis
Deda. Not only an emblem of the capital,
but the embodiment of the country’s
spirit, she cradles a sword in her right
hand to ward off enemies and a bowl
of wine – a symbol of Georgia’s famous
hospitality – in her le. - POMEGRANATES IN MTSKHETA
As well as being one of the oldest
inhabited cities in the world, Mtskheta –
which lies just 15km north of Tbilisi – has
a colourful daily market which extends
from the church entrance along the main
drag and down a labyrinth of connecting
alleyways. Freshly squeezed pomegranate
juice is made from a fruit that has grown
in this part of the world for millennia. - FOOD IN A PICKLE
Locals oen jest that no vegetable is safe
from fermentation! Towering tangles of
ajonjoli (a pickled wild flower), cabbage
(oen dyed red with beetroot), peppers,
fermented whole garlic (mzhave niori),
and even watermelon dominate Telavi
Market. They’re great for digestion, and
make an excellent partner for chacha –
the country’s infamous grape brandy. - NUTS FOR BADRIJANI NIGVZIT
Walnuts are Georgia’s second bigest
export and a staple of Georgian cuisine.
The versatile nut can be pulverised and
used in soups, pickled in slack wine
(nigozis muraba), sweetened with honey
CUISINE at a
CROSSROADS
Sarah Freeman’s photoessay explores
the vibrant food culture of Georgia
Georgia_MATT_CH_v2CATHY ZP.indd 122 04/04/2017 20:44