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Georgian Food and Wine: What to Eat, Drink, and What It Costs

Georgian Food and Wine: What to Eat, Drink, and What It Costs

Home Georgia Food & WineGeorgian Food and Wine: What to Eat, Drink, and What It Costs
Gate8 Global Team

Georgian food is criminally underrated and cheap: a full restaurant meal runs $6–15 per person. Don't miss khinkali (soup dumplings eaten by hand, never with a fork), khachapuri (cheese-filled bread — several regional versions, the Adjarian boat-shaped one with a raw egg on top is the showstopper), and qvevri wine, made using an 8,000-year-old method UNESCO recognizes as intangible cultural heritage — Georgia is widely credited as the actual birthplace of winemaking.

Georgian food doesn't get talked about nearly enough outside the region, which is honestly good news for you — it means restaurant prices haven't caught up to how good the food actually is. This is what to order, what to drink, and roughly what it costs.

Must-try dishes

DishWhat it isApprox. price
KhinkaliSoup dumplings filled with spiced meat or mushroom and cheese — eat by the twisted top handle, no fork$0.50–1 per piece
Khachapuri (Imeretian)Flatbread filled with tangy Imeretian cheese, the everyday version$4–8
Khachapuri AdjaruliBoat-shaped, open-topped, filled with cheese, butter, and a raw egg you stir in tableside$6–10
MtsvadiGrilled skewered pork or beef, Georgia's answer to the barbecue$5–10
LobioSlow-cooked kidney bean stew, often served in a clay pot with cornbread$3–6
ChurchkhelaWalnuts strung on a thread, dipped repeatedly in thickened grape juice — a chewy, candy-like street snack$1–2
Khinkali dumplings, Georgian cuisine
A plate of traditional Georgian khinkali dumplings

Georgian wine — the actual birthplace

Archaeological evidence of winemaking in Georgia dates back roughly 6,000 BCE, making a strong case that this is where wine, as a practice, actually began. The signature method — qvevri, large egg-shaped clay vessels buried underground for fermentation and aging — produces distinctive amber wines (whites fermented with the skins on, giving them a deeper color and tannic structure closer to a red) that taste unlike anything made in oak or steel. Kakheti, in eastern Georgia, is the country's main wine region and worth a dedicated day trip or tasting tour from Tbilisi.

Traditional qvevri winemaking in Georgia
Georgian qvevri clay wine vessels at a family winery

The supra — Georgia's feast tradition

ℹ️

A supra is a traditional Georgian feast, run by a toastmaster (tamada) who leads a structured sequence of toasts — to peace, to family, to guests, to the departed — often with wine drunk from a horn. If you're invited to one, it's a genuine honor and a real window into Georgian hospitality; don't be surprised if it runs for hours and the table never seems to run out of food.

Dietary needs

  • Vegetarian: genuinely easy — lobio (beans), pkhali (walnut-vegetable pâtés), badrijani nigvzit (eggplant rolled with walnut paste), and Imeretian khachapuri are all naturally vegetarian and widely available.
  • Vegan: check for sour cream, butter, and clarified butter (used in some khachapuri and khinkali fillings) — ask directly, since menus don't always specify. Pkhali and most bean and vegetable dishes are usually vegan-friendly with a quick check.
  • Halal: less established than in some other regions — pork (mtsvadi, some sausages) appears frequently on menus, so specify beef or chicken versions and ask about shared cooking surfaces if that matters to you.
  • Nut allergies: walnuts are used constantly (sauces, pâtés, churchkhela) — always ask, since they show up in dishes that don't obviously look nut-based.

What it costs, all in

Meal typePrice per person
Street snack (khinkali or khachapuri slice)$1–4
Casual restaurant meal$6–12
Mid-range restaurant with wine$12–25
Wine tasting tour in Kakheti (half-day)$40–80

Questions people actually ask

Is Georgia really the birthplace of wine?
The archaeological evidence is strong — pottery shards with grape residue dating to roughly 6,000 BCE have been found in Georgia, among the oldest evidence of winemaking anywhere. It's genuinely one of the country's most legitimate travel-marketing claims, not just a slogan.
How do you eat khinkali properly?
Pick it up by the twisted knob on top (never with a fork, which is considered a rookie mistake), take a small bite to release the hot broth inside, sip that broth, then eat the rest — leaving the tough top knob on the plate uneaten is normal, not rude.
Can vegetarians and vegans eat well in Georgia?
Vegetarians do very well — a whole category of traditional 'lenten' dishes (beans, walnut pâtés, eggplant rolls) exists specifically for religious fasting periods and is delicious and widely available year-round. Vegans need to double-check individual dishes for butter and sour cream, but plenty of options exist with a little asking.