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Georgian vs Ethiopian food & cuisine

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Georgia

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Ethiopia

In Georgia, people consume about 1825 g of food per day, with grains taking the biggest share at 30%, and fish and seafood coming in last at 2%. In Ethiopia, the daily total is around 906 g, with grains leading at 59% and fish and seafood at the bottom with 0%.

Georgia

Ethiopia

The average Georgian daily plate size is

The average Ethiopian daily plate size is

1825 g.
906 g.
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Grains

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Fish and seafood

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Produce

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Eggs and dairy

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Meats

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Sugar, fats and nuts

Georgian tables operate on strategic abundance. You cook extra because neighbors might drop by, because hospitality demands it, because cultural memory remembers scarcity. The cuisine balances meat and dairy with herbs and sharp acidity; seafood doesn’t have a big tradition here. Fat and acid create the core tension. Rich elements (dairy, nuts, meat) always pair with sharp counterpoints: wine vinegar, pomegranate molasses, tkemali (sour plum sauce), pickles. Fermentation runs deep here: pickled vegetables, fermented breads, aged cheeses, wine made in buried clay vessels. All deliver the enzymes and probiotics modern nutritionists chase.

This is a land of extremes – of vegans and carnivores. Also, a place where food is eaten in its pure form – simple and minimally processed. Food is served on a communal platter for all to share. Most meals are built around injera – a spongy, fermented teff flour flatbread. An assortment of different stews (wot / wat) on top follows.  When one asks about the menu for a meal, the answer is often simply injera, because it is understood that stews will accompany it. Usually, a meal includes several vegetarian options and one meat stew. You can also opt for a purely vegan option, as this country has some of the best vegetarian food. The majority of stews are deliberately intense, spiced with the complex, earthy, hot spices.

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Grains 550 G

WHEAT

462 G

RICE

9 G

CORN

58 G

BARLEY

10 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

5 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

6 G

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Grains 534 G

WHEAT

109 G

RICE

23 G

CORN

144 G

BARLEY

44 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

1 G

MILLET

21 G

SORGHUM

72 G

OTHER CEREALS

120 G

Wheat dominates, giving flour for traditional breads: tonis puri, shotis puri, lavashi, and khachapuri. Bread serves as food and a utensil, soaking up sauces. Traditional loaves bake in a tone, a large cylindrical clay oven. Shotis puri has a distinctive canoe shape, formed by slapping dough onto the oven’s hot interior. Georgian lavash runs larger than other versions, sometimes 60 centimeters across, thicker, with a puffy center, chewy texture, and air pockets.

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Nearly 60% of the Ethiopian diet comes from grains, most of them grown locally and tied to place. Where other cuisines center on rice, bread, or noodles, Ethiopian cuisine centers on fermented grains, particularly injera, the teff flatbread that functions as both bread and plate.

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Produce 470 G

PULSES

0 G

VEGETABLES

195 G

STARCHY ROOTS

137 G

FRUITS

138 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

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Produce 216 G

PULSES

62 G

VEGETABLES

35 G

STARCHY ROOTS

91 G

FRUITS

28 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

Meat on a Georgian table always comes with a large pile of vegetables and greens. Feasts demand an abundance of veggie dishes. Greens appear year-round: parsley, fennel, ramson, mint, lettuce, basil, savory, estragon. They’re served alongside garden radish, whole tomatoes, cucumbers, and peppers. Georgian cuisine features numerous vegetarian dishes that incorporate beans, eggplants, and spinach. Many rural families practice subsistence farming, growing their own produce with little surplus for market. This homegrown portion often goes underreported in official data.

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Vegetables in Ethiopian cooking are rarely the focus on their own. They are carriers of spices and flavors.  Raw vegetables are nearly absent in traditional cooking.  There’s also very little dairy in the vegetable dishes – Ethiopian fasting food is effectively vegan.

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Meats 109 G

POULTRY

51 G

PORK

28 G

BEEF

18 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

3 G

OTHER MEAT

2 G

OFFALS

7 G

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Meats 24 G

POULTRY

1 G

PORK

0 G

BEEF

10 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

6 G

OTHER MEAT

3 G

OFFALS

4 G

Georgian cooking uses all meats. High-quality pork neck, lamb, beef, and chicken get prepared simply with wine and herbs. Offal might not be on the menu at every restaurant, but it is beloved at home. Some mountainous areas hunt boars and rabbits.

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When people are not eating plants, they’re eating beef. Or goat. When fasting ends, meat returns more — but rarely as an everyday habit. Meat stays limited by cost and availability, yet for many Ethiopians, fresh raw meat is a delicacy and speciality.

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Fish and seafood 29 G

FISH

28 G

SEAFOOD

1 G

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Fish and seafood 1 G

FISH

1 G

SEAFOOD

0 G

Georgia’s agriculture favors livestock and crops over seafood. Without advanced fishing techniques and preservation, pre-modern Georgians struggled to make fish a staple. Today, well-established freshwater fishing exists, particularly for bass species in lakes and reservoirs. Still, fish dishes remain a small part of traditional cuisine. Trout and carp are most popular, usually fried or barbecued.

Fish is not central to Ethiopian cuisine, and that makes geographic sense. Ethiopia is landlocked.  But it’s not absent either. Where fish is available and affordable, people eat it. Where it isn’t, they don’t think about it much.

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Eggs and dairy 499 G

EGGS

29 G

MILK AND DAIRY

456 G

ANIMAL FATS

14 G

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Eggs and dairy 94 G

EGGS

1 G

MILK AND DAIRY

92 G

ANIMAL FATS

1 G

Georgians produce old-recipe cheeses like sulguni and imeruli, moderately salty cow’s milk products with elastic texture. Sheep’s milk makes pungent guda and smoked mountain cheeses. Cheese is integral but plays a different role than in European cuisine: it’s rarely a snack. Georgian cheese gets boiled in milk, roasted, fried, baked in pastry, or flavored with oil and spices. Beyond khachapuri, traditional dishes include nadughi and gebjalia.

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The cheese in Ethiopia is ayib. It’s fresh, mild, and crumbly, similar in texture to cottage cheese. Its main job is to cool and balance the heat of spiciness alongside kitfo or spicy stews. It’s deliberately low in flavor so it doesn’t compete, just tempers. There’s no aged cheese tradition, no cheese culture in the European sense. Yogurt exists but isn’t central.

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 168 G

NUTS

12 G

SWEETENERS

126 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

25 G

OILCROPS

5 G

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 37 G

NUTS

1 G

SWEETENERS

19 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

13 G

OILCROPS

4 G

Walnut trees have grown in Georgia for millennia, once considered symbols of abundance and planted near churches. They’re ground into pastes for sauces, incorporated into stews, or stuffed into meats. Recipes also call for walnut oil. Walnuts blur the line between nut and fruit. Harvested green and pickled, they create an intense condiment. This early harvest reflects a cuisine that thinks about plants across their entire lifecycle.

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The most important fat is niter kibbeh, spiced clarified butter. It’s infused with garlic, ginger, and a bunch of spices and runs through a large part of Ethiopian cooking. It’s not eaten on its own; it’s a cooking medium and flavor base. The version using vegetable oil instead of butter is called yeqimem zeyet.

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Herbs

BAY LEAVES

CILANTRO

DILL

MARIGOLD

MINT

PARSLEY

PENNYROYAL

SUMMER SAVORY

TARRAGON

THYME

WILD GARLIC

HOLY BASIL

KOSERET

RUE

Georgia
Common
Ethiopia

BAY LEAVES

CILANTRO

DILL

MARIGOLD

MINT

PARSLEY

PENNYROYAL

SUMMER SAVORY

TARRAGON

THYME

WILD GARLIC

HOLY BASIL

KOSERET

RUE

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Spices

BLUE FENUGREEK

BLACK PEPPER

CORIANDER

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

FENUGREEK

AJWAIN SEEDS

CINNAMON

CLOVES

KORARIMA

NIGELA SEED

TIMIZ PEPPER

TURMERIC DRY

Georgia
Common
Ethiopia

BLUE FENUGREEK

BLACK PEPPER

CORIANDER

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

FENUGREEK

AJWAIN SEEDS

CINNAMON

CLOVES

KORARIMA

NIGELA SEED

TIMIZ PEPPER

TURMERIC DRY

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Aromatics

TOMATO

GARLIC

ONION

CHILI PEPPERS

GINGER

Georgia
Common
Ethiopia

TOMATO

GARLIC

ONION

CHILI PEPPERS

GINGER

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Condiments

FRUIT MOLASSES

SOUR PLUMS

TOMATO PASTE

WALNUTS

WINE

WINE VINEGAR

YOGURT

HONEY

CLARIFIED BUTTER

SESAME SEEDS

Georgia
Common
Ethiopia

FRUIT MOLASSES

SOUR PLUMS

TOMATO PASTE

WALNUTS

WINE

WINE VINEGAR

YOGURT

HONEY

CLARIFIED BUTTER

SESAME SEEDS

Georgia

SEASONINGS

Georgian food tastes sour and savory first, then nutty and herbal, with warmth. Flavors are built around contrast between richness and acidity.  Sourness is very important; it is created with sour plums, pomegranate juice, grape verjuice, and small amounts of vinegar. Fruit acidity sharpens meats and walnut sauces and often replaces the role that citrus or dairy plays in other cuisines.

Walnuts are a structural element,  ground into sauces satsivi and bazhe, used to thicken stews, and mixed into fillings. Walnuts add fat, bitterness, and body without cream or butter.

Fresh herbs define much of the aroma. Fresh cilantro is the most important, used both as leaves and seeds. Dill, parsley, summer savory and especially fresh tarragon are used generously. Many dishes combine dried and fresh herbs in a single dish. Garlic is used confidently but in balance, rarely sharp.

Georgians use coriander seed, fenugreek, marigold petals, and black pepper a lot. Chili exists, but does not define the cuisine. Blue fenugreek is much more prominent than in neighbouring cuisines. It belongs to the same family as the fenugreek, but has a milder, sweeter flavour reminiscent of  autumn leaves. Also, the marigold flower is quite distinctive, called the Imeretian Saffron. Georgians use the dried and ground petals to give an earthy flavour and bright yellow colour to walnut dishes and sauces.

Many spices are dried and ground together rather than added separately, thus there are unique Geogrian mixes:

KHMELI SUNELI – a distinct blend, which combines coriander, fenugreek, blue fenugreek, marigold, bay leaf, summer savory, celery seed, dried basil, dill, parsley, and mint. There is no fixed recipe for khmeli suneli, like Indian masala.

SVANETIAN SALT is a popular mix; the recipe originates in Svaneti, but nowadays it can be bought virtually everywhere and is a practical souvenir. Salt contains a mixture of sea salt, dried garlic, fenugreek, coriander, cumin, chili pepper, dill, and several other herbs.

AJIKA – a spicy and subtly flavored condiment made with hot peppers, garlic, coriander, tomato, fenugreek, marigold, and salt. It is a part of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Georgia. It comes in red and green varieties, with red being the hotter option. Red ajika exists in two variants – dry and wet. Dry is a seasoning mix used on raw meat, while the wet one has the consistency of a thicker mustard and is used to highlight the already roasted meat.

TKEMALI – Georgian sauce made of cherry and red-leaf plums. The flavour of this sauce varies, but it’s generally pungently tart. Alongside plums, garlic, cumin, coriander, dill, chili pepper, pennyrile and salt are used. Tkemali is used for fried or grilled meat, poultry and potato dishes, and has a place in Georgian cuisine similar to the one ketchup has in the United States.

BAZHE – rich and creamy sauce of ground walnuts, coriander, fenugreek, blue fenugreek, marigold petals and sometimes onions and garlic. The unique texture comes from the way the walnuts are processed and emulsified with water or other liquids. A touch of vinegar or pomegranate juice is often added to balance brightness. It can be served as a dip for vegetables or bread or poured over grilled meats or fish.

SATSIVI – is a thicker, more luxurious sauce compared to bazhe. It’s made with ground walnuts, coriander, fenugreek, blue fenugreek, sometimes cinnamon or cloves. Satsivi can be served hot or cold and is a classic accompaniment to poultry dishes, especially chicken or turkey.

Ethiopia

SEASONINGS

Ethiopian food is spicy, but that’s not really the point. The heat comes layered with cumin, cardamom, cinnamon, and fenugreek, so it reads as warm and complex, not just hot. There’s a faint smokiness, too. And there is the sour. Injera is fermented, and that tang runs through every bite. In Ethiopia, spice intensity tracks occasion and ingredients. Daily stews tend to be milder and simpler.  Celebratory dishes often become more layered and intense, mainly through higher amounts of berbere, niter kibbeh, longer cooking, and richer bases.

Ethiopian flavor logic is fat, aromatics, spice, and time. In that order.

Dishes start with niter kibbeh. This is spiced clarified butter, and it’s the fat base for almost everything. You’re infusing butter with onions, garlic, ginger, turmeric, fenugreek, black cumin, and Ethiopian cardamom, korarima. This is a less sweet, less floral, and more earthy spice, with a slightly smoky edge. That fat carries all of it deep into whatever you cook next.

Onions are hugely important in Ethiopian food, used in almost every dish and simmered into sauces.

Then there’s berbere, the master spice of meat dishes, lentil dishes, bean dishes. A dry spice blend, but complex, using from 13 to more than 20 spices. Chili, fenugreek, coriander, rue, korarima, black pepper, allspice. Some families toast whole spices and grind fresh; the ratios are personal.  Spices bloom in the fat.

BERBERE — a foundational spice blend built on chili peppers, garlic, ginger, fenugreek, korarima, cinnamon, and cloves. It gives Ethiopian food its signature heat, depth, and slightly smoky edge.

MITMITA – A finer, fiercer blend built around bird’s eye chili, cardamom, cloves, and cumin. Hotter than berbere and used as a finishing spice, sprinkled at the table over kitfo (raw minced beef) and other meat dishes. Unlike berbere, it typically includes salt.

MEKELESHA – Ethiopia’s finishing spice mix, stirred into stews in the last few minutes of cooking. The blend consists of seven hand-roasted spices: korarima, nutmeg, cinnamon, black pepper, cumin, timiz pepper, and cloves. The name means, more or less, “to make tasty.”

SAUCES

AWAZE – A traditional sauce or spice paste, made by combining berbere and mitmita with tej (Ethiopian honey wine) and oil.  Served with meats and is used as an all-purpose table condiment.

DATTA (also called qotchqotcha) – a fermented condiment used similarly to awaze, mainly in the southern part. Its aromas and flavors stem from microbial fermentation of a vegetable-spice mixture. Spices include garlic, ginger, sweet basil, rue, cinnamon, clove, Ethiopian caraway, and Ethiopian cardamom. Tangier and more herbal than awaze, it’s a regional alternative.

Who EATs more per day?

Pick the heavier plate

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