50 Best will be sending four teams – each including chefs and sommeliers from establishments on The World’s 50 Best Restaurants list – on four routes to four different parts of Georgia to explore the country’s food, drink, culture and landscape. In the process, 50 Best will create a series of films to be aired in July, shining a spotlight on the little-known traditions that influence much of what we see in restaurants today. Starting here, 50 Best Explores Georgia…
TRIP 1
Route: Tbilisi to Kakheti
Tim Raue, chef-owner, Restaurant Tim Raue, Berlin. No.40 The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2019
Mark Bright, co-founder and wine director, Saison, San Francisco. No.70 The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2019
Saddle up for the first leg as two of the world’s eminent authorities in cuisine and wine head due east from Tbilisi, Georgia’s capital city, to Kakheti, the principal wine region that plays host to 4,250sq km of vines. This region produces half of the country’s vinous stock and it’s believed Kakheti has the oldest uninterrupted wine-producing history in the world. Monasteries date back 1,500 years, where unique grape styles such as rkatsiteli, mtsvane and saperavi hold sway over the more common varietals that we see on wine lists today. The wine here is characterised by deep, tannic reds and ethereal, floral whites that are gradually being reintroduced to the wider gastronomic world as supply chains become more sophisticated. The team will stop by the legendary Pheasant’s Tears winery and restaurant, owned by American John Wurdeman, who has been paramount in raising the profile of Georgian wine across the globe.
TRIP 2
Route: Samtskhe Javakheti to Kartli
Andreas Caminada, chef-owner, Schloss Schauenstein. No.50 The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2019
Anna-Lena Junge, wine director, Schloss Schauenstein. No.50 The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2019
Switzerland’s most lauded chef and his rising-star sommelier head to one of the most culturally diverse regions in Georgia, occupied by the Ottomans in the 16th century and with a population that is part Muslim and part Christian. Javakheti’s cuisine draws influences from Turkey, Russia and north Africa and is home to a string of unique breads that you won’t find anywhere else in the world. Somini, kakala, ukhas and bazlama laven and un-laven bakes form the basis of every meal, often paired a mulberry-based jam with either sweet or savoury courses. This route sweeps along the vertiginous Samtskhe Pass, where grapes grow on the steep valley steps. With vines at up to 1,700m above sea level, this is one of the highest viticultural regions in the world, producing crisp, acidic whites and rich reds that hold characteristics similar to the more-familiar malbec grape, grown mainly in France and South America.
TRIP 3
Route: Samegrelo to Svaneti
Dominique Crenn, chef-owner, Atelier Crenn. No.35 The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2019
Søren Ledet, co-owner and wine director, Geranium. No.5 The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2019
The epic mountain valley of the Svaneti region – home to the legend of the Argonauts and the location thought to be where the historic Golden Fleece was stored – will play host to iconic San Fran chef Dominique Crenn alongside one of the world’s most acclaimed sommelier-restaurateurs in Søren Ledet. This jaw-slackeningly beautiful province is also one of Georgia’s most remote, where gold prospectors settled in antiquity, enjoying the isolation afforded by the inaccessible mountains. The Svan culture here is remarkably preserved and home to unique traditions that have remained the same for hundreds of years. It is also home to the Svan polyphonic singing – a harrowing chant that reverberates through the mountains day and night. In ancient times, the Svan Supra (feast) was a symbol of peace and respect repeated across all Georgia. The feast would feature up to 50 toasts during a meal, charging rakhi (a local moonshine similar to vodka) long into the night.
TRIP 4
Route: Imereti to Racha
Clare Smyth, chef-owner, Core by Clare Smyth. No.66 The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2019
Gareth Ferreira, head sommelier, Core by Clare Smyth. No.66 The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2019
The London-based duo will experience an ancient region that has been inhabited for at least three millennia and was a key staging post on the Silk Route from China. Set in one of the most mountainous areas of the country, Racha is lined by towering coniferous trees, where the southern slopes of the Great Caucasus mountain range divides Racha from Russia. The team will head to the diminutive village of Nakhshirghele, where some of the country’s finest wines are produced. Far out in the forest, they will discover the Baia family, where a group of six sisters are keeping the family’s wine-making tradition alive. Theirs is described as reverence for tradition bordering on ‘anarchic’, where this sisters’ clay amphora pots buried in the ground used to produce the wine have a history dating back nearly as far as the country itself. Imereit is also home of the locally famous Imeretian khachapuri, a dish of thin dough filled with cheese, egg and meat that is growing in popularity as street food from California to London.