You
may ignore the chashushuli,
Or skip the ojhakhuri,
But when in Georgia,
Don’t be a bourgeois—
Eat with your hands khinkali and khachapuri!
Georgian
food invites poetry. Each dish carries a story, and as you eat, you gather
memories to take home.
Let’s
start by quite literally getting a handle on our food. Khinkali,
believed to have arrived with the Mongols in the 13th century, originated in
Georgia’s mountains. These
taste like meat dumplings or momos and the filling is held together with a
topknot. Eaten by hand, gripping the twisted
topknot to sip the hot, savoury broth inside before finishing the dumpling. The
handle is always discarded.
![]() |
| Khinkalis - The dumpling with a handle |
The
Adjaruli Khachapuri tells another tale. This boat-shaped cheese bread
arrives piping hot, crowned with a raw egg and butter. You tear off the crust
and swiftly mix it all together. Its form is said to mirror a boat on the Black
Sea, with the filling symbolising the sea, sun, and the coastal region of
Adjara—lovingly served by mothers and wives to bring luck to fishermen heading
out to sea.
![]() |
| Adjaruli Khachapuri - bringing luck to fishermen at sea |
![]() |
| Pork Mtsvadi (kebabs) |
The joy of travel continues at home. We recreated Badrijani Nigvzit—eggplant with walnut paste—an effortless cocktail snack. Roast or fry eggplant slices, spread with garlicky walnut paste, garnish with pomegranate seeds, and serve. Simple, and deeply Georgian.
![]() |
| A twist to the Eggplant |




