For another take on spatchcock chicken, check out our Spatchcock Chicken in Spicy Yoghurt Sauce! Although I have an entire bookcase filled with cookbooks I haven’t yet found a good reason to stop buying new ones. It’s not that I’m a cookbook junkie. It’s just that shockingly good cookbooks keep coming available. This is how I ended up with a copy of Olia Hercules’ Kaukasis. Olia is a Ukrainian food writer, whose work I got introduced to through her first book Mamushka. In that book she shared recipes from Ukraine and other former USSR republics. This hit home for me because food from across the former Soviet Union found its way to our home dining table. Haven grown up on these delicious and varied flavours, I love to recreate them for my family. Georgian is a definitely a favourite. It’s a shame that food from the gorgeous country isn’t better known because it is both delicious and unique. Combining characteristics of the Mediterranean and Central Asia with a spin all its own, it certainly deserves its time in the sun!

Georgian chicken recipe

My own discovery of Georgian food began with a family holiday to the Georgian coast. And as much as I love cooking and experimenting in the kitchen, I started with the recipe that is well known in my childhood home. Poussin Tabaka, which is a spatchcocked baby chicken cooked in an oven under a press. As a young child I didn’t know where the name ‘tabaka’ came from. As I’ve learned from Olia, it is derived from the word ‘tapa’, a cast-iron pan used for cooking it. I assumed it to be something a lot more alluring and even dangerous. You see, “tabak” means ‘tabacco’ in Russian, so what’s a young girl, who read too many 19th century novels to think but fire and adventure! Spatchcocking as a technique can see intimidating if you haven’t done it before. Added to the complex Georgian spices and this can seem like a challenging recipe. In reality, spatchcocking or butterflying a chicken is very easy and results in such amazing chicken that it is worth learning. As well, most of the spices in this recipe are classic household staples, so nothing too scary to be found here! This recipe is a great introduction to Georgian cuisine. If you’d like to try another, take a look at my Chicken in Garlic Walnut Sauce, or Satsivi!

Blackberry sauce

For someone not familiar with explosive flavours of Georgian cuisine this might look like a bog standard roast chicken with cranberry sauce but let me tell you it’s NOTHING like it. The flavours of the Caucasus are bold and tantalising. This is accomplished through a liberal use of fresh herbs, spices and delicious vegetables the region is so rich with. You really get to experience it in this fantastic blackberry sauce! And although the chicken itself is only seasoned with salt and pepper, the blackberry sauce carries a flavour punch that will you blown away. You will want to bottle this sauce up and pour it over everything. It is the most exciting thing that happened in my kitchen in a long time!

Recipe tips and notes

Make sure your chicken is the smallest you can find. Mine worked but was a bit too big. I wasn’t able to find unripe sour grapes, so I used regular green grapes. Instead of coriander/cilantro stalks I used a small amount of crushed coriander seeds.

More whole chicken recipes

Air Fryer Greek Whole Chicken Rosemary and Thyme Roast Chicken and Potatoes Spatchcock Roast Chicken in Breadcrumbs and Potatoes Instant Pot Whole Chicken Georgian Chicken Tabaka with Spicy Blackberry Sauce - 16Georgian Chicken Tabaka with Spicy Blackberry Sauce - 65Georgian Chicken Tabaka with Spicy Blackberry Sauce - 63Georgian Chicken Tabaka with Spicy Blackberry Sauce - 92Georgian Chicken Tabaka with Spicy Blackberry Sauce - 53Georgian Chicken Tabaka with Spicy Blackberry Sauce - 99Georgian Chicken Tabaka with Spicy Blackberry Sauce - 51