Joseph Stalin’s menu
Reserve and travel sweet (tatlebi, sweets that keep and transport)

Churchkhela, the 'Georgian Snickers' of the Trails

PreservingDocumented🍯moyen1 h + drying several days

Strings of walnuts threaded and repeatedly dipped in thickened grape must, dried until they form a shiny, flexible stick. Neither candy nor cake: a natural energy bar, sweet and tender at heart, that keeps all winter.

Reserve and travel sweet (tatlebi, sweets that keep and transport)

Strings of walnuts threaded and repeatedly dipped in thickened grape must, dried until they form a shiny, flexible stick. Neither candy nor cake: a natural energy bar, sweet and tender at heart, that keeps all winter.

When I was a kid and we ran off into the hills, we'd slip this into our pocket: a rope of walnuts dipped in grape juice, dried in the autumn wind. No oven, no refined sugar — just grapes and walnuts, and it lasted months without rotting. It's walker's food, comrade: it weighs nothing and carries you far. But beware of the one that shines too much: sometimes they wax it to hide it's old.
Joseph Stalin
Ingredients
  • Grape must (pressed juice)several liters (sweet coating)
  • Wheat flouras needed to thicken (binder)
  • Whole walnut halvesenough to fill strings (core)
  • Cotton threadas needed (support)
How it was made : Invented as soldier's and traveler's food, churchkhela accompanied Georgian armies as early as the Middle Ages because it keeps without hardening. At harvest time, every family made dozens, hung like candles — hence its nickname. No New World ingredients: only grapes, wheat, and walnuts, all present in the Caucasus since antiquity.

See also