Georgian dishes
Merab Beradze
The book “Georgian dishes” was published in Georgia into 15 languages: Georgian, Russian, Polish, German, French, Spanish, Ukrainian, italian, Greek, Turkish, Chinese, Japanese, and Hebrew languages.
Georgian dishes
Merab Beradze
© Merab Beradze, 2016
© Lia Beridze, translation, 2016
© Yuri Mechitov, photos, 2016
Editor Amiran Melua
Created with intellectual publishing system Ridero
Little vocabulary of herbs and spices
Fresh Herbs
Basil – Rekhani
Celery – Niakhuri
Cilantro – Kindzi
Dill – Kama
Mint – Pitna
Parsley – Okhrakhushi
Summer Savory – Kondari
Dried Herbs & Spices
Cinnamon – Darichini
Cloves – Mikhaki
Coriander – Kindzi
Fenugreek – Utskho Suneli
Marigold – Imeruli Shaprani
Indian Caraway – Dira
Satsivi
Products:
1 turkey
400 g onions
1 tablespoon dry coriander
1 tablespoon utskho suneli
4—5 cloves garlic
1 hot pepper
2 tablespoon pounded saffron (“yellow flower”)
450—500 g dry walnuts
2—3 tables spoon vinegar
2 eggs
Salt, clove and cinnamon to taste
It is truly believed that no Georgian table, especially a festal one, can do without satsivi. So let satsivi introduce you to the Georgian cuisine!
Put a fat well-cleaned turkey into a big saucepan and cover it with water. Close the cover, put the saucepan on the stove and cook for 30—40 min., often removing the scum, until the turkey is ready. Put the turkey on a wooden or enamelled board and salt it from inside and outside. Put the turkey into the stove and cook until the skin turns red. Remove fat from the broth left in the saucepan. Pour half glass of the fat over fine-shredded onions and stew them on a pan until the onion turns pink. Pour broth into the mass and cook for 10—15 min.
Separately prepare the seasoning: pound dry walnuts, dilute them in half glass of vinegar, add pounded dry coriander, utskho suneli (dry spices), saffron, garlic, and pepper and mix. Pass the mass through a sieve, pour it into the broth and boil on a low fire for approx. 20 min, stirring constantly. Let the broth cool, pour in 2 yolks beat up in a spoon of vinegar and stir to prevent the yolk from curdling. Then cut the turkey into pieces, put into a deep dish and pour over the satsivi sauce and some walnut oil.
If you follow the instructions properly, you will have the essence of the Georgian table – His Majesty the Satsivi, so inviting and tasty! True, it takes time to cook satsivi, but it will really enrich your table and everybody is sure to love it!
Enjoy with “Tsinandali” wine.
Walnut Sauce (Bazha)
Products:
50 g walnuts
50 g onions
2 cloves garlic
1 sprig dill
3—4 pomegranates