Georgian cuisine
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Georgian Cuisine

Where Wine Was Born

Europe Eastern Europe & Caucasus
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Georgian cuisine is the Caucasus at its most generous — cheese-filled breads, juicy dumplings, walnut-herb pastes, and the world's oldest winemaking tradition. Every meal is a supra (feast) where guests are treated like family.

A Culinary Portrait

The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Georgian cuisine

Georgian cuisine traces its roots over 8,000 years, shaped by the country's position at the crossroads of Europe and Asia in the Caucasus Mountains. Archaeological evidence of ancient qvevri clay vessels confirms Georgia as one of the oldest winemaking regions on Earth, and its culinary traditions evolved alongside viticulture, with grape-based products influencing everything from sauces to confections. The fertile valleys of Kakheti and Kartli provided grains, beans, and herbs, while highland pastures sustained dairy and livestock traditions that remain central to the table today.

Situated along the Silk Road, Georgia absorbed influences from Persian, Ottoman, and Central Asian traders while fiercely preserving its own identity. The supra, a ritualized feast led by a tamada (toastmaster), is the beating heart of Georgian hospitality.

Each toast follows a prescribed order honoring God, family, ancestors, and the land. Orthodox Christian fasting traditions also shaped the cuisine, producing an extraordinary repertoire of plant-based dishes featuring walnuts, herbs, and beans that rival any meat-centered meal in depth and complexity. Walnuts (ground into sauces, stuffings, and spreads), dried marigold petals (imparting golden color and earthy warmth), blue fenugreek (a signature herb unique to Caucasian cooking), tkemali (sour plum sauce used as a universal condiment), and sulguni cheese (a brined, stretchy cheese essential to khachapuri and countless dishes).

Key Flavors

appetizer walnut soup chicken pickle fermented soup beef appetizer walnut

Masters of the Kitchen

The chefs who shaped Georgian cuisine

Tekuna Gachechiladze

Georgia's most famous chef and TV personality, known for modernizing Georgian c…

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Tekuna Gachechiladze

Georgia's most famous chef and TV personality, known for modernizing Georgian cuisine while honoring the supra feast tradition.

Meriko Gubeladze

Award-winning Georgian chef who has championed Georgian wine country cuisine, p…

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Meriko Gubeladze

Award-winning Georgian chef who has championed Georgian wine country cuisine, particularly the clay-pot and open-fire cooking traditions of Kakheti.

Ia Tabagari

Chef and restaurateur who has brought Georgian cuisine to international attenti…

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Ia Tabagari

Chef and restaurateur who has brought Georgian cuisine to international attention through innovative interpretations of traditional dishes like khinkali and khachapuri.

Essential Reading

The cookbooks that define Georgian cuisine

The Georgian Feast Darra Goldstein

The Georgian Feast

Darra Goldstein · 1993

The pioneering English-language cookbook that introduced the world to Georgia's extraordinary cuisine and feasting trad…

Tasting Georgia Carla Capalbo

Tasting Georgia

Carla Capalbo · 2017

An award-winning food and wine journey through Georgia, exploring the country's 8,000-year winemaking tradition and div…

Olia's Kitchen: Georgian and Other East… Olia Hercules

Olia's Kitchen: Georgian and Other Eastern European Recipes

Olia Hercules · 2015

A vibrant exploration of Georgian and post-Soviet cuisines with accessible recipes celebrating the region's rich food t…

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5 authentic recipes from Georgian cuisine

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