Tasting Georgia: A Food and Wine Journey in the Caucasus by Carla Capalbo

    • Categories: Bread & rolls, savory; Georgian; Vegan
    • Ingredients: bread flour; fast-acting yeast; sunflower oil
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Notes about this book

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Notes about Recipes in this book

  • The master dough recipe 1 (yeast)

    • Dannausc on August 11, 2018

      Fairly easy; quite good. I would definitely make it again.

  • Beef and chickpea stew (Chashushuli)

    • TrishaCP on December 07, 2020

      This was an ok beef stew. The ginger is added in eye-poppingly large quantities but I felt like I could barely taste it. It definitely needs the fresh herbs at the end to liven things up. I used adjika for my chile and would use more next time (I used a teaspoon).

  • Chicken with pomegranate juice (Katami brotseulit)

    • Dannausc on August 11, 2018

      Pretty decent; easy to make

    • Kduncan on November 13, 2018

      Pretty easy to make, good flavors but not really complex. Really needs the pomegranate seeds or it falls a bit flat. Keep the skin side of the thighs out of the liquid to keep the skin not flabby.

    • TrishaCP on October 24, 2020

      This was ok and I agree that the pomegranate seeds are really needed. I tried to keep the chicken skin out of the liquid (because otherwise why bother with getting them crispy)- but they still kind of steamed. I think I would just use boneless skinless thighs if making it again.

  • Pumpkin with walnuts (Gogra nigvzit)

    • TrishaCP on October 24, 2020

      This is a great way to jazz up bland pumpkin (or in my case bland kabocha squash). The walnut paste is familiar to me from other Georgian vegetable preparations and I love it- although in this case I reduced the garlic to one clove.

  • Aubergine/eggplant rolls (Nigvziani badrijani)

    • Dolcetto23 on September 08, 2021

      Delicious version of classic recipe. The only thing I'd say is, it's very garlicky (maybe reduce that a bit especially if planning to keep for more than a day) and it's a bit too salty for me. I would reduce both next time, and maybe up the herbs. I kept the walnut paste pretty coarse and that was good.

  • Aubergine/eggplant ajapsandali (Ajapsandali)

    • ricki on August 06, 2020

      We both enjoyed this. Complex and fresh -- will make again. one-third of the recipe made three good-sized servings. one tbsp fresh summer savory + a large pinch dried. Dill and cilantro were going to seed, so I went light on those (the flavors still came through) and heavy on the parsley. a good use for long, thin eggplants; sliced crosswise only, they held together well.

  • Duck with blackberry sauce (Ikhvi maqvlit)

    • TrishaCP on April 13, 2018

      This was absolutely delicious. The blackberry sauce was a tart and beautiful contrast to the fatty duck. I used Georgian fenugreek in the recipe (generally stronger than other fenugreeks) since it is mentioned in the beginning of the book, though not specified in this recipe. The cooking time for the duck (marinated overnight) worked well for us, although I seared the duck skin at a lower temperature to keep it burning and our duck came out medium rather than medium rare following a 10 minute simmer in the sauce.

    • Dolcetto23 on September 08, 2021

      I agree with TrishaCP! This was gorgeous, in both taste and appearance, and much enjoyed by a professional-chef-guest! I did reduce the final cooking time in the sauce to 7 minutes rather than 10, and would actually reduce that to 6 next time. I used blue fenugreek (which my copy of the book does specify). . . and I reduced the salt slightly. But it's easy, a real winner and such a lovely way to use a glut of local wild blackberries. We had it with a delicious Georgian saperavi (red wine) called Orgo, and I made aubergine rolls from the same book which were also great (this a fab book)

  • Beans with walnuts and spices (Lobio 1)

    • TrishaCP on October 03, 2021

      These are not your basic beans, since they are made even creamier with the addition at the end of a spiced paste of ground walnuts. I really liked the spices of the beans, even though I didn’t have the marigold leaves that were specified. (I used more parsley and celery leaves instead.) I’m not sure that I loved the walnut paste though - it did make them creamier but also a bit stodgier. (I used cranberry beans instead of borlotti beans.)

  • Chicken and walnut stew (Katmis kharcho)

    • TrishaCP on October 10, 2020

      The sauce was very flavorful for fairly simple ingredients. There seemed to be a lot of sauce relative to chicken. (I did use boneless, skinless thighs in place of bone-in chicken). Also the book called for two tablespoons of marigold- one ground and one whole leaves. Not sure why the two types were needed when it all gets blended together and I only had ground marigold, so I just used the one tablespoon.

  • Adjarian khachapuri (Adjaruli khachapuri)

    • kelly_6xarrl on May 26, 2026

      I cooked this at 400 on a pizza stone. I would suggest playing around with the cheese combination. It’s difficult to replicate in the US the Georgian cheeses you would normally taste in this but I liked the combo of feta (in brine), mozzarella, and Gruyère.

  • Spicy ribs (Tskhare neknebi)

    • TrishaCP on August 31, 2021

      This was good, but probably not a repeat. This dish is largely going to depend flavor-wise on the quality of your adjika. I used the wet paste version and I wanted more flavor, so I added it to taste. (I can’t imagine one tablespoon is enough seasoning for all the ribs if you use the dry version). I did marinate the ribs overnight and I would highly recommend doing so.

  • Cheesy cornbread (Tchvishtari)

    • TrishaCP on June 18, 2022

      This is a great side for Georgian dishes-both crispy as well as gooey from the cheeses. I am always uncertain when a baking recipe calls for polenta whether I am using the correct product. In this case, I had Georgian white cornmeal on hand, so used that here with great success.

  • Chicken with nut sauce (Bazhe 2)

    • TrishaCP on January 12, 2025

      Flavorful and easy to pull together. I made the chicken as specified but the sauce would also be great with a simple grilled or sautéed chicken breast too. I served the sauce at room temperature.

  • Beans stewed with herbs (Lobio 2)

    • TrishaCP on June 18, 2022

      I didn’t love this version of lobio- the flavors felt very flat to me. (Even though I used an adjika blend as my chile.) It was much better topped with a pickled element (I made jonjoli salad.)

  • Grilled chicken with garlic sauce (Shkmeruli)

    • Dannausc on August 11, 2018

      Good and easy, though not particularly memorable

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Reviews about this book

  • Eat Your Books by Jenny Hartin

    Experience the food, wine and beauty of the Caucasus in Carla Capalbo's gorgeous book.

    Full review
  • ISBN 10 1566560594
  • ISBN 13 9781566560597
  • Linked ISBNs
  • Published Aug 01 2017
  • Format Hardcover
  • Page Count 464
  • Language English
  • Countries United States
  • Publisher Interlink Publishing Group

Publishers Text

Winner of the prestigious André Simon Award explores Georgia's culinary traditions.

Nestled between the Caucasus Mountains and the Black Sea, and with a climate similar to the Mediterranean's, Georgia has colorful, delicious food. Vegetables blended with walnuts and vibrant herbs, subtly spiced meat stews and home-baked pies like the irresistible cheese-filled khachapuri are served at generous tables all over the country. Georgia is also one of the world's oldest winemaking areas, with wines traditionally made in qvevri: large clay jars buried in the ground.

Award-winning food writer and photographer Capalbo has traveled around Georgia collecting recipes and gathering stories from food and winemakers in this stunning but little-known country. The beautifully illustrated book is both a cookbook and a cultural guide to the personal, artisan-made foods and wines that make Georgia such a special place on the world's gastronomic map.



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