Begin your journey at a vibrant local market, where your guide will show you how to pick the perfect cuts of meat just like a local expert. After gathering fresh spices and vegetables, head to a private space to master the ancient art of the grill.
As you arrive from the market to the private garden, the experience truly begins. You aren’t just a tourist here; you are a guest in your guide's home. To set the mood, you’ll be greeted with a refreshing local welcome drink. Depending on the season, this might be a chilled homemade tarragon lemonade, a glass of crisp local white wine, or a traditional herbal tea brewed with mountain mint.
While you prepare the fire, snack on “Meze”—small plates of local cheeses, crusty bread, and sun-ripened tomatoes you just picked up at the market. Then, get to work. Forget store-bought sauces; do it the ancestral way.
Learn the “massage” technique. Don’t just pour liquid over the meat; work the spices—coarse sea salt, cracked black pepper, and hand-ground sumac—into the fibre. Use a simple but powerful base: plenty of sliced onions (which provide the natural enzymes to tenderize the meat) and perhaps a splash of mineral water or a secret local ingredient to keep it juicy. No vinegar, no shortcuts—just patience and quality.
The most important “spice” in a shashlik isn't in a jar—it’s in the wood. Don’t use charcoal briquettes; use the soul of the orchard. Use cherry and apple wood for a sweet, mild aroma that perfectly complements pork or poultry. Use apricot or plum wood, which burn hot and steady, giving the meat a rich, deep golden hue and a subtle fruity smokiness that you can’t find anywhere else.
Learn how to judge the heat not by a thermometer, but by the colour of the white ash on the glowing embers.