The Many Faces of Georgian Wine
Selected wines from my tastings — a growing collection that will expand with every new discovery.
Georgia is not simply another country on the European wine map. In very few places is wine so deeply woven into landscape, memory,
and identity. Here, wine is not a lifestyle accessory; it is a cultural
language — one that has been spoken continuously for thousands of years.
Archaeological evidence places the origins of winemaking in this land some
eight millennia ago, making Georgia not only an ancient wine country, but
arguably the birthplace of wine itself. The qvevri — large clay vessels buried
in the earth — remains the most tangible symbol of that continuity, a technique
that has survived not as a museum relic, but as a living, everyday practice.
This closeness with wine is reflected in everyday
practice. Across the country, countless families maintain their own small
vineyards or continue the tradition of home winemaking. Some cultivate vines in
village plots passed down through generations, others source grapes during
harvest and produce wine in their own cellars. These are not commercial
ambitions, but expressions of heritage — a quiet, enduring connection between
people and land. As a result, wine in Georgia is not limited to wineries and
labels. It exists in homes, in courtyards, in conversations — often unrecorded,
but deeply authentic.
Over the years, I have begun to write down impressions gathered from a wide range of Georgian wines — sometimes in formal tastings, but more often around Georgian tables where wine is inseparable from food, conversation, and the rhythm of shared experience. The bottles listed below are those that left a particular impression on me. Together, they form a personal map of Georgian wine — a journey that may begin in Kakheti, but ultimately extends far beyond it.
Kakheti
If Georgia is the cradle of wine, Kakheti is its beating heart. Located in eastern Georgia, between the Greater Caucasus and the dry steppe landscapes, the region embodies the country’s viticultural identity more than any other. Around 70% of Georgia’s vineyards are located here, making Kakheti not only the most important region historically, but also structurally dominant today.
Yet Kakheti is not a monolith. It is a
landscape of valleys, river basins and microzones shaped by the Alazani and
Iori rivers, where altitude, soil composition and exposure create a remarkable
diversity of wine styles. The region’s climate — warm, dry and continental —
allows grapes to reach full ripeness, giving rise to wines of depth, structure
and ageing potential. At the same time, higher-altitude sites and
limestone-rich soils preserve freshness and aromatic precision.
What ultimately defines Kakheti, however, is not only geography but continuity. This is where the qvevri tradition. Georgia’s ancient Qvevri Winemaking Tradition, where wine ferments and ages in large clay vessels buried underground, is recognised by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage, producing wines with remarkable texture, structure, and authenticity.
Kakheti it is also a major region for Georgian red wine, and above all, the homeland of Saperavi, one of the most distinctive red grapes in Europe. Unlike many international varieties, Saperavi possesses both deeply colored juice and formidable structure, allowing it to produce wines of remarkable depth and longevity.
Kakheri is the region where traditional family cellars and modern wineries coexist within the same cultural framework. Wine here is not reinvented — it is continued.
Telavi
Telavi, often is regarded
as the cultural and administrative centre of Kakheti. The vineyards
here lie on the right bank of the Alazani Valley, often at slightly higher
elevations, where cooler nights help preserve acidity and aromatic precision.
As a result, wines from this area tend to show more balance and clarity than
some of the warmer, more powerful expressions found further south. There is a
certain discipline to Telavi wines - structure is present, but rarely
excessive, fruit is defined, but not overwhelming. It is a style that reflects
both geography and a long tradition of cultivated winemaking.
Schuchmann Wines
— Rkatsiteli
A slightly rounder style, with a soft texture that makes it easy to like. Not a
wine of sharp edges, but one that feels comfortable, almost familiar — like
something you could open without thinking twice. Score: 8.0/10
Teliani Valley —
Saperavi
A gentler expression of
Saperavi. The structure is there, but softened, allowing the fruit to come
forward in a more relaxed way. It feels less like a statement, more like an
introduction. Score: 7.8/10
Tsinandali
Within this broader zone, the Tsinandali microregion occupies a particularly important
place. It was here, in the 19th century, that Prince
Alexander Chavchavadze established one of the first estates to adopt European
winemaking techniques, introducing fermentation and ageing in barrels alongside
traditional Georgian Qvevri. This marked a turning point: for the first
time, Georgian wine began to consciously engage with European stylistic
frameworks while retaining its indigenous grape varieties.
The classic Tsinandali style — a blend of
Rkatsiteli and Mtsvane — reflects that dual identity. These wines are typically
fermented and aged with a degree of control that emphasises freshness, elegance
and structure. Rkatsiteli provides backbone and acidity, while Mtsvane
contributes aromatics and lift — notes of green apple, quince, citrus and white
flowers, often supported by a subtle mineral line. Unlike the more textural and
tannic qvevri whites of Kakheti, Tsinandali wines tend to be more linear, more
restrained, and perhaps more immediately accessible.
At the same time, the region today is no longer
defined by a single approach. Alongside classical producers, a growing number
of smaller wineries are reinterpreting Tsinandali through partial or full
qvevri fermentation, creating wines that sit somewhere between tradition and
modernity. This coexistence of methods gives the area a particular dynamism: it
is not a static historical reference, but an evolving dialogue between past and
present.
In this sense, Telavi and Tsinandali together represent one of the most complete expressions of Kakheti’s identity — a place where Georgian wine’s ancient foundations and its more recent European influences meet, not in opposition, but in balance.
Schuchmann Wines — Tsinandali 2020Tsinandali Estate — Tsinandali 2021
A polished and classical benchmark of the appellation. The nose opens with citrus, green apple and white flowers, supported by a subtle mineral undertone. On the palate, it is precise, fresh and well-balanced, combining linear acidity with a gentle roundness. The finish is clean, elegant and fairly persistent. Score: 8.6/10
A more structured and slightly evolved style. Aromatically, it shows ripe apple, quince, light honey and almond, with a hint of spice. The palate is rounder and more layered, with integrated acidity and a more complex texture. The finish is long, composed and refined. Score: 8.4/10
Mestvireni Winery — Tsinandali 2022
A more intimate and terroir-driven expression. The nose reveals fresh pear, citrus zest and light herbal tones, with a sense of natural purity. On the palate, it is vibrant, slightly rustic but very authentic, with high acidity and a direct, lively character. The finish is crisp and energetic, less rounded but highly expressive. Score: 8.3/10
Napareuli
Twins Wine Cellar —
Napareuli Rkatsiteli
Bright from the first moment. There’s a clarity here that feels almost
refreshing mentally, not just physically. It’s the kind of wine that resets
your palate and your expectations. Score: 8.2/10
Lopota Wines —
Napareuli Saperavi
This is Saperavi without the weight you might expect. It still has depth, but
it moves more lightly. There’s something elegant in that restraint — a sense
that power is present, but deliberately held back. Score: 8.0/10
Telavi Wine Cellar
— Napareuli
Easy to approach, but not empty. It gives you fruit, freshness, and just enough
structure to keep it interesting. A wine that doesn’t ask questions — it simply
works. Score: 7.8/10
Gurjaani
Gurjaani itself feels
understated — and that is precisely its strength. It does not try to define
itself through intensity, but through balance and reliability.
The wines, often based on Rkatsiteli, can show a slightly broader structure than Tsinandali, with a gentle richness alongside maintained freshness. There is no sharp edge here — everything is integrated, measured, and calm.
It’s a style that doesn’t seek attention, but rewards it!
Vazisubani Estate —
Gurjaani 2022
Clean, balanced and quietly
expressive. Orchard fruit, citrus and a soft, rounded finish. Score: 8.3/10
Shumi Winery —
Gurjaani 2024
A more polished style. Smooth, integrated, and very easy to follow from start
to finish. Score: 8.2/10
Mukuzani
Located in the central
part of Kakheti, within Gurjaani Municipality, Mukuzani represents one of the
most defined and disciplined expressions of Saperavi. If some parts of Kakheti
speak openly, Mukuzani tends to hold back. It is not about immediate charm — it
is about structure, patience, and evolution.
These are wines built
with time in mind. The fruit is darker and more restrained — blackcurrant,
plum, sometimes a touch of tobacco or spice — but always framed by firm tannins
and a composed acidity. Oak ageing, often present, is not there to dominate but
to support the architecture of the wine.
At first, Mukuzani can
feel строг — almost distant. But with time, it reveals precision and depth, a
kind of quiet confidence that doesn’t need to prove itself quickly.
Dakishvili Family
Vineyards — Mukuzani
Refined and quietly confident. The oak is integrated, the structure is precise,
and the wine unfolds slowly rather than immediately. Score: 9.0/10
Dakishvili Family Vineyards — Khikhvi (Qvevri)
Khikhvi here feels textured but not heavy. Dried apricot, honey, a touch of spice, but what stands out is the balance — the wine never becomes dense. There is a quiet elegance beneath the qvevri structure. Score: 8.5/10
Château Mukhrani —
Mukuzani 2019
Structured and architectural. Dark fruit, subtle oak spice, and a clear sense
of direction on the palate. Still young, but already balanced and precise. Score:
7.8/10
Askaneli Brothers —
Mukuzani
A slightly more approachable interpretation. Riper fruit, softer edges, but
still carrying the backbone that defines the appellation. Score: 7.7/10
Akhasheni
Akhasheni offers a
different expression of Saperavi — one that is more open, more immediately
engaging. Known for its naturally semi-sweet style, it balances richness with a
surprising sense of freshness.
The fruit here leans
toward red cherry and ripe berries rather than deep, brooding tones. There is
softness, but not heaviness. When well made, Akhasheni feels fluid, almost
effortless — a wine that invites rather than challenges.
It doesn’t aim for complexity
in the same way as Mukuzani. Instead, it focuses on harmony — sweetness,
acidity and fruit moving together without tension.
Badagoni —
Akhasheni
Bright and open from the start. Red cherry, soft sweetness, and a clean, easy
flow on the palate. Score: 8.1/10
Teliani Valley —
Akhasheni
A more structured version. The
sweetness is better framed, giving the wine more balance and a slightly more
serious feel. Score: 8.2/10
Mildiani —
Akhasheni
Soft, rounded and immediately approachable. Less about depth, more about
pleasure and ease. Score: 7.9/10
Vazisubani
Vazisubani often feels
like a quiet counterpoint within Gurjaani. Less widely discussed, but capable
of producing wines with clarity and elegance, particularly in white varieties.
Typically based on
Rkatsiteli, sometimes with Mtsvane, the wines here tend to show a balance
between freshness and gentle roundness. They are not as linear as Tsinandali,
nor as structured as some other zones — instead, they sit comfortably in
between.
There is a calmness to
Vazisubani wines. They don’t push themselves forward, but they remain
consistent, composed, and quietly expressive.
Vazisubani Estate — Kisi
A cleaner, more lifted expression of Kisi. Yellow fruit, floral notes, and a gentle roundness, with enough freshness to keep everything in line. It feels composed and very drinkable. Score: 8.3/10
Nekresi Estate — Mtsvane
Bright and lifted. Green apple, white flowers, and a clean mineral line. Compared to heavier qvevri whites, this feels almost weightless — precise and refreshing. Score: 8.2/10
Vazisubani Estate —
White Blend
Balanced and composed. Apple, citrus and light floral tones, with a smooth and
steady finish. Score: 8.2/10
Telavi Wine Cellar
— Vazisubani
Slightly broader in texture. Ripe fruit, softer acidity, but still maintaining
a clear structure. Score: 8.0/10
Kakhuri Gvinis
Marani — Vazisubani
A more traditional touch.
Subtle texture, a hint of qvevri influence, adding depth without losing
freshness. Score:7.8/10
Kvareli
At the foothills of
the Greater Caucasus, Kvareli carries a sense of depth. The wines here often
feel darker, more inward, shaped by both climate and landscape.
Saperavi reaches a
kind of completeness in Kvareli. The wines are structured and concentrated, yet
at their best, they avoid excess weight. There is always a line — something that
keeps the wine focused.
These are not wines
that reveal everything at once. They unfold gradually, offering layers rather
than immediate expression.
Chubini Winery — Kisi (Qvevri)
A more natural, slightly untamed expression. Orange peel, dried herbs, and a subtle tannic grip. It feels alive, almost evolving in the glass, with a strong sense of place. Score: 8.4/10
Khareba — Kvareli
Saperavi
Balanced between power and accessibility. Dark fruit, soft spice, and a steady,
composed palate. Score: 8.3/10
Kindzmarauli
Corporation — Kvareli Saperavi
More structured and inward. Black cherry, plum and firm tannins that suggest
ageing potential. Score: 8.5/10
Giorgi
Solomnishvili — Kvareli Saperavi
More artisanal in feel. Slightly wild aromatics, with earth and dark berries,
and a lively, energetic structure. Score: 8.6/10
Kindzmarauli
Kindzmarauli is
immediately recognisable. A naturally semi-sweet Saperavi, it balances richness
with structure in a way that, when done well, feels surprisingly precise.
The fruit is generous
— ripe cherry, blackberry — but the acidity keeps it from becoming heavy. There
is an inherent tension between sweetness and freshness that defines the best
examples.
It is perhaps one of
the most approachable styles in Kakheti, but also one that can show real
character beyond its initial appeal.
Kindzmarauli
Corporation — Kindzmarauli
Classic and expressive. Ripe berries, soft sweetness, and a clean, balanced
finish. Score: 8.3/10
Shumi Winery —
Kindzmarauli
More refined and controlled. The sweetness is better integrated, allowing
structure to come forward. Score: 8.4/10
Papari Valley —
Kindzmarauli
A more natural and slightly less polished style, but with energy and
authenticity. Score: 8.2/10
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If Kakheti is the beating heart of Georgian wine, Kartli is its quiet
mind.
Located in central-eastern Georgia, stretching along the Mtkvari River
basin and surrounding Tbilisi, Kartli occupies a very different place in the
country’s wine landscape. It is not defined by scale or dominance — vineyards
here are smaller, more fragmented — but by history, subtlety, and restraint.
This is one of the oldest viticultural areas in Georgia, once at the centre of
the ancient Kingdom of Iberia, where wine was cultivated not only as
agriculture, but as part of courtly and urban culture.
The climate in Kartli is more moderate and less predictable than in
Kakheti. Influenced by both continental and transitional weather patterns, with
colder winters and greater variation during the growing season, it does not
always allow for the same level of ripeness. But what it offers instead is
precision. Grapes here tend to retain higher acidity, lower alcohol, and a more
delicate aromatic profile. The wines are rarely about power — they are about
balance, clarity, and nuance.
Kartli’s identity is built around a different set of grape varieties.
Chinuri stands at the centre — a white grape capable of producing wines with
remarkable structure and ageing potential, often showing notes of green apple,
quince, herbs and a subtle mineral backbone. Alongside it, Goruli Mtsvane
brings aromatic lift, while reds are shaped by Tavkveri and Shavkapito —
varieties that favour elegance over density, producing lighter, more
transparent wines.
If Kakheti speaks loudly, Kartli speaks carefully. It does not try to
impress — it reveals itself slowly.
Central Kartli
At the core of the region, around Mtskheta and the central valleys, Kartli
finds its most balanced expression. Vineyards here benefit from relatively
stable conditions, with alluvial soils and moderate altitudes creating wines
that feel composed and structured without excess.
Chinuri dominates, often in both classical and qvevri styles. These
wines can carry a surprising firmness — a quiet structure that builds over time
rather than announcing itself immediately. Tavkveri, on the other hand, offers
a different perspective: lighter, softer, and more openly aromatic.
Iago’s Wine — Chinuri (Qvevri)
One of the purest expressions of Chinuri. There is a natural clarity here —
green apple, dried herbs, a subtle tannic grip. It feels alive, almost
conversational, changing slightly with every sip. Score: 9.0/10
Château Mukhrani — Chinuri
More polished and controlled. The texture is smoother, the structure more
defined, with a clean line from start to finish. Less wild, but very precise. Score:
8.3/10
Tavkveri — Natenadze’s Wine
Light in colour, but not in character. Red berries, a touch of spice, and a
softness that makes it immediately engaging. It doesn’t try to be more than it
is — and that honesty works. Score: 8.4/10
Mukhrani
Mukhrani holds a special place within Kartli — historically, culturally,
and stylistically. Once a royal estate, it represents one of the earliest
attempts to systematise winemaking in Georgia along European lines, while still
rooted in local tradition.
The wines here tend to be more structured than elsewhere in Kartli.
There is a sense of order — fruit, acidity and texture arranged with intention
rather than spontaneity.
Château Mukhrani — Shavkapito 2018
Elegant and slightly restrained. Red cherry, light spice, and a refined
structure that unfolds gradually. It feels composed, almost architectural.
Score: 8.5/10
Château Mukhrani — Goruli Mtsvane
Bright and lifted. Citrus, white flowers, and a clean, mineral finish. A wine
that leans toward freshness without losing depth. Score: 8.3/10
Ateni Valley
Tucked within a narrow valley near Gori, Ateni introduces a different
dynamic. The microclimate here, shaped by surrounding hills and airflow, allows
for wines with particularly high acidity and freshness.
Historically known for Atenuri — a traditional sparkling style
made from Chinuri and Goruli Mtsvane — the area continues to produce wines that
feel vibrant and energetic.
There is a sense of movement in Ateni wines. They don’t sit still on the
palate — they evolve quickly, keeping your attention.
Ateni Wine Cellar — Atenuri Sparkling
Lively and refreshing. Green apple, citrus, and a fine, persistent mousse. Not
overly complex, but full of energy. Score: 8.4/10
Okro’s Wines — Chinuri
A more natural expression. Slightly oxidative, with dried apple, herbs and
texture. It feels less about precision and more about character. Score: 8.5/10
Gori & Surroundings
Around Gori, Kartli becomes slightly warmer, and the wines gain a bit
more openness. The structure softens, and the fruit becomes more immediate,
though still far from the intensity of Kakheti.
This is where Tavkveri and Shavkapito feel most at home — producing
wines that are light, aromatic and quietly expressive.
Natenadze’s Wine — Shavkapito
A wine with a subtle wildness. Red fruit, earth, and a slightly untamed edge
that gives it personality. Score: 8.6/10
Tavkveri — Artanal Wines
Soft, easy, but not simplistic. Fresh berries, gentle acidity, and a smooth,
flowing texture. Score: 8.2/10
Other Areas of Kartli
Beyond the more recognised zones, Kartli extends into smaller villages
and less defined areas such as Kaspi and Kareli. These are not places of strict
stylistic identity, but of variation.
Here, the wines can feel more experimental, sometimes less polished, but
often deeply authentic. There is a sense that Kartli, as a region, is still
exploring itself — not fully defined, but constantly evolving.
Kartli does not try to compete with Kakheti — and it does not need to.
Where Kakheti builds wines of depth, power and longevity, Kartli offers
something quieter: finesse, freshness, and precision. It is a region that asks
for attention rather than demanding it.
These are not wines that overwhelm you. They stay with you — slowly, thoughtfully —
long after the glass is empty.
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IMERETI
If Kartli is restraint and Kakheti is power, Imereti is harmony.
Located in western Georgia, stretching across rolling hills and river valleys shaped by the Rioni and its tributaries, Imereti offers a very different interpretation of Georgian wine. The landscape here is greener, softer, and more humid — a world away from the dry continental plains of the east. Vineyards are scattered rather than expansive, often surrounding family homes, integrated into everyday life rather than dominating it.
This is a region where wine feels less monumental and more intimate.
The climate plays a defining role. Humidity, frequent rainfall, and milder temperatures create conditions that favour freshness over concentration. Grapes rarely reach the same level of ripeness as in Kakheti, but that is not the goal. What Imereti preserves is acidity, lightness, and aromatic clarity. The wines tend to be lower in alcohol, more delicate in structure, and driven by tension rather than weight.
Winemaking traditions reflect this philosophy. While qvevri is used here as well, the Imeretian style differs significantly — typically involving shorter skin contact and less extraction. The result is wines that carry texture, but remain lifted and drinkable, never heavy. There is a sense of balance that feels almost effortless.
Imereti’s identity is built on its indigenous grape varieties. Tsitska, Tsolikouri, and Krakhuna form the core of white winemaking — each bringing a different dimension. Tsitska offers high acidity and precision, often showing citrus and green apple. Tsolikouri adds roundness and subtle stone fruit character, while Krakhuna contributes weight and a gentle honeyed depth. Together, they create blends that feel complete rather than constructed.
If Kakheti speaks in bold statements and Kartli in quiet sentences, Imereti feels like a conversation — fluid, nuanced, and constantly evolving.
Baghdati & Obcha
Around Baghdati, including the village of Obcha, Imereti shows one of its most complete expressions. This part of the region has become especially important for small family producers working seriously with local grapes and traditional methods. The wines here often combine freshness with a little more texture and composure.
Obcha, in particular, has emerged as one of the names that returns again and again when speaking about contemporary Imeretian wine. There is often something very clear in these wines — not simplicity, but precision without force.
Baia’s Wine — Tsitska / Tsolikouri / Krakhuna
A wine that feels fully at ease with itself. Citrus, orchard fruit and a gentle textural roundness come together naturally, without any element pushing too hard. It captures that distinctly Imeretian balance between freshness and softness. Score: 8.7/10
Baia’s Wine — Krakhuna
A broader, more generous expression. Yellow apple, pear and a light honeyed tone, but still held together by a fresh line underneath. Richer than many Imeretian whites, yet still graceful. Score: 8.6/10
Simon Chkheidze Wine Cellar — Tsolikouri
Slightly more layered and reflective in style. There is texture here, some dried fruit, a little nuttiness, and a sense that the wine opens gradually rather than all at once. A bottle that rewards patience.Score: 8.6/10
Terjola
Terjola offers a slightly different face of Imereti — still fresh and lifted, but often a touch more linear and mineral in expression. This is not a zone of heaviness or broad gestures. The wines tend to feel focused, shaped more by detail than by volume.
There is often something especially fine-boned about wines from this part of Imereti. They do not rush toward you; they stay measured, even when they are deeply characterful.
Ramaz Nikoladze — Tsolikouri
A beautifully focused wine. Green apple, subtle herbs, light citrus, and a mineral thread running through it. Nothing exaggerated, nothing ornamental — just a very pure expression of place and grape. Score: 8.5/10
Ramaz Nikoladze — Tsitska-Tsolikouri Blend
More textural than the straight Tsolikouri, but still restrained. There is a quiet firmness beneath the fruit, and the finish feels clean and composed. A wine that speaks softly, but clearly. Score: 8.6/10
Zestafoni & Kvaliti
Toward Zestafoni, and especially around the village of Kvaliti, Imereti becomes a little more textural and individual in tone. The wines can still be bright, but there is often a bit more grip, more savoury complexity, and a stronger sense of handcrafted identity.
This is where Imereti can feel slightly more tactile without losing its regional elegance.
Archil Guniava Wine Cellar — Tsitska
Tense, energetic, and very alive. Lemon, green plum and a faint saline edge carry the wine forward, while the structure remains light on its feet. It feels precise, but never severe. Score: 8.6/10
Archil Guniava Wine Cellar — Krakhuna
A more structured expression, with ripe fruit, quiet spice and a slightly waxy texture. There is more depth here, but it still finishes with balance rather than weight. Score: 8.6/10
Other Areas of Imereti
Beyond the better-known points such as Baghdati, Terjola, and Zestafoni, Imereti extends into smaller villages and family cellars where wine remains deeply local and often highly individual. These places do not always form clearly defined subregions in the same way as some eastern Georgian appellations. Their identity is often carried more by producer, village, and grape than by formal classification.
That, in a way, suits Imereti.
It is a region that rarely insists on rigid hierarchy. It reveals itself through nuance, through local differences, and through wines that feel shaped by households and hillsides as much as by broader geography. Imereti offers something gentler: freshness, tactility, and quiet complexity.
These are wines that do not announce themselves with force. They settle in slowly — and by the end of the bottle, you realise they have said quite a lot !
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If Imereti is harmony, Samegrelo is instinct. Located in western Georgia along the Black Sea basin, stretching from the coastal lowlands toward the foothills of the Caucasus, Samegrelo is one of the least defined — yet most intriguing — wine regions of the country. It is not a region shaped by formal appellations or clearly structured microzones. Instead, it exists in fragments: villages, family vineyards, and small-scale producers working quietly, often outside the spotlight.
Wine here has never been about scale. It has remained deeply local.
The climate is among the most challenging in Georgia for viticulture. Humid subtropical conditions, heavy rainfall, and warm temperatures create constant pressure from disease and rot. This makes large-scale, consistent production difficult — but it also explains why viticulture in Samegrelo has historically been careful, selective, and often secondary to other agricultural activities.
What survives here does so with intention.
The wines of Samegrelo are shaped by this environment. They are rarely about structure or longevity. Instead, they lean toward lightness, aromatic expression, and immediacy. Acidity is present but softer than in Imereti, and the wines often feel rounder, more fluid, sometimes slightly rustic — but in a way that feels honest rather than unrefined.
The region’s identity rests on a set of rare and distinctive grape varieties. Ojaleshi is the most recognised — a red grape traditionally grown on hillside terraces, often producing semi-dry wines with red fruit, floral notes, and a gentle sweetness. Alongside it, other varieties appear only marginally: Tsolikouri is present in the lowlands for local consumption, while rare grapes such as Koloshi survive in small pockets. Chkhaveri, although characteristic of western Georgia, belongs primarily to neighbouring Guria rather than Samegrelo.
If Kakheti is a statement and Imereti a conversation, Samegrelo feels more like a memory — something fleeting, difficult to define, but quietly persistent.
Martvili & Salhino
At the heart of Samegrelo’s wine identity lies the area around Martvili and the historic village of Salhino. This is where Ojaleshi finds its most recognised expression, traditionally linked to hillside vineyards and semi-dry styles.
Historically, Salhino was associated with one of Georgia’s most distinctive wines — Ojaleshi made in a naturally semi-sweet style, balancing ripeness with freshness. Even today, this remains one of the few wines in Georgia where a touch of sweetness feels entirely natural rather than stylistic.
The wines here often feel soft, aromatic, and gently expressive.
Oda Wines — Orbeluri Ojaleshi
A more intense and artisanal interpretation. Red berries, gentle spice, and a slightly wild edge, with a cleaner, more defined finish. It retains the softness of Ojaleshi, but with greater precision and depth. Score: 8.5/10
Martvilis Marani — Ojaleshi
Red berries, wild strawberry, a hint of rose petal, and a soft, natural sweetness that never becomes heavy. The tannins are light, almost secondary, allowing the wine to flow easily. It feels more about charm than structure. Score: 8.4/10
Oda Family Winery — Ojaleshi
More restrained and slightly more structured. The fruit is less overtly sweet, with cranberry, light spice, and a subtle earthy undertone. A quieter, more contemplative style, where balance replaces charm. Score: 8.3/10
Senaki & Abasha
Moving toward Senaki and Abasha, the landscape opens into flatter lowlands, and the wines become even lighter and more immediate. Viticulture here is more fragmented, often limited to small household production rather than identifiable estates.
There is less emphasis on a single defining style, and more variation from village to village.
Ojaleshi still appears, but often in simpler, more rustic interpretations. Whites, sometimes based on Tsolikouri or other local varieties, can also be found — typically fresh, uncomplicated, and made for early drinking.
In this part of Samegrelo, wines are rarely bottled or commercially distributed. What exists is largely local — made for the table, for family, and for immediate consumption. Structure is secondary to drinkability, and variation from one household to another is part of the region’s identity.
Zugdidi & Coastal Samegrelo
Closer to Zugdidi and the coastal areas, viticulture becomes even more marginal. The humid maritime influence makes consistent grape growing difficult, and wine production here is often minimal, sometimes almost incidental.
Yet even here, small pockets of production exist.
The wines tend to be very light, sometimes fragile, occasionally unpredictable. But they carry a certain immediacy — a sense that they are made for the moment rather than for ageing.
Here again, production is almost entirely non-commercial, and wines are best understood as part of local life rather than as defined stylistic expressions.
Other Areas of Samegrelo
Beyond Martvili, Senaki, Abasha and Zugdidi, Samegrelo extends into a network of villages where wine remains deeply personal and rarely commercial. These are places where production is small, sometimes inconsistent, but often rooted in long family traditions.
There is no single style that defines Samegrelo.
Some wines lean slightly sweet, others are fully dry. Some are clean and expressive, others are more rustic and unpredictable. What connects them is not precision, but authenticity.
Here, it is worth mentioning Koloshi — Rare Local Variety in the upper Samegrelo. A nearly forgotten red grape, found in very small quantities in the foothills. Light-bodied, high acidity, with red currant and herbal notes. Slightly rustic, but deeply authentic.
Samegrelo does not try to position itself among Georgia’s great wine regions. Samegrelo offers something far more elusive: spontaneity, softness, and a sense of place that resists definition.
These are not wines you analyse. They are wines you encounter — briefly, sometimes imperfectly — and remember long after.
༺🌿🍇🌿༻
GURIA & ADJARA
Guria — Ozurgeti & Chokhatauri
Teimuraz Sharashidze Cellar — Chkhaveri (Guria, Chokhatauri)
One of the most authentic expressions of Gurian Chkhaveri. Light in colour, almost translucent, with wild strawberry, rose petal and a subtle herbal edge. There is a natural lift here — acidity carries the wine effortlessly, while structure remains delicate. It feels fragile, but precise. Score: 8.6/10
Davit & Tariel Kobidze (Dato’s Wine) — Chkhaveri Amber (Guria, Erketi)
A more textural and unconventional style. Slight skin contact brings structure, with dried red fruit, tea-like notes and a gentle grip. Still unmistakably Chkhaveri, but interpreted through a more artisanal lens. Score: 8.5/10
Adjara — Keda & Upper Valleys
Adjarian Wine House — “Porto Franco” Chkhaveri (Adjara, Keda)
A more structured and polished interpretation. Red currant, floral notes, and a clearer fruit definition, supported by balanced acidity. Compared to Guria, this feels more composed, but slightly less wild. Score: 8.3/10
RACHA–LECHKHUMI
Khvanchkara — Racha
Royal Khvanchkara — Khvanchkara
A benchmark expression of the appellation. Bright raspberry, strawberry, and floral notes lead into a naturally semi-sweet palate, supported by fresh acidity. The sweetness is present but controlled, giving the wine lift rather than weight. Clean, balanced, and stylistically classic. Score: 8.6/10
Chrebalo Wine Cellar — Khvanchkara
A softer, more traditional style. Red fruit, gentle sweetness, and a rounded texture, with less emphasis on structure and more on drinkability. It feels immediate and accessible, closer to local, village-style interpretations. Score: 8.5/10
Other Villages of Racha
Lechkhumi
Tvishi Wine Cellar — Tsolikouri (Tvishi PDO)
A classic expression of Tsolikouri from one of the few defined microzones in the region. Fresh, slightly off-dry, with green apple, pear, and citrus, supported by bright acidity. There is a light sweetness, but it feels balanced rather than dominant. Clean, lifted, and very approachable. Score: 8.4/10
Alongside it, Rachuli Tetra offers a different perspective — a white grape capable of producing fresh, lightly aromatic wines, often with green apple, citrus, and a subtle herbal edge.
MESKHETI
Natenadze Wine Cellar — Meskhuri Mtsvane
A defining expression of the region. Green apple, citrus peel, and wild herbs lead into a firm, mineral structure. The acidity is pronounced but integrated, giving the wine a long, focused finish. It feels architectural — built more on line than on volume. Score: 8.7/10









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