Piti
Azerbaijani Cuisine

Piti

4.0
14 reviews
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Reviews 14

M
Mason
· Dec 21, 2024
5/5

Holiday memory — Piti that transported me back

I first ate Piti on a trip five years ago and have been searching for a version this good ever since. This restaurant finally delivered the richly layered quality I remembered. pomegranate was handled correctly — something most restaurants here get slightly wrong. Azerbaijani cuisine reflects Turki…

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C
Charlotte
· Apr 22, 2024
3/5

Honest verdict on Piti — good but not exceptional

Piti here was solidly made — fragrant and saffron-gilded without anything to complain about. pomegranate was present and handled reasonably. But something was missing from the depth that this dish should have. tea drinking is a ritual — black tea served in armudu pear-shaped glasses accompanies eve…

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A
Amelia
· Feb 14, 2025
2/5

Piti exceeded every expectation

I went in with low expectations — I'd had mediocre versions before. What I found was Piti made with real commitment to dried sour plums and technique. The sweet-sour from fruit result was more complex and satisfying than anything I'd had before. Azerbaijani cuisine reflects Turkic, Persian, and Cau…

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T
Takashi
· Jan 20, 2025
4/5

Restaurant review — Piti that actually delivered

I'm sceptical of any restaurant claiming to do Piti well, having been disappointed often enough. This one delivered. The fragrant and saffron-gilded base was authentic and the use of chess herbs (dill, parsley, tarragon, mint) showed real knowledge. tea drinking is a ritual — black tea served in ar…

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D
Dylan
· Oct 28, 2025
5/5

Why Piti deserves more attention

Piti rarely gets the international recognition it deserves. The sweet-sour from fruit complexity is genuine, not simple, and the technique involved in using pomegranate correctly takes real skill. tea drinking is a ritual — black tea served in armudu pear-shaped glasses accompanies every social enc…

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S
Sebastian
· Jan 07, 2026
5/5

Cultural discovery through Piti

Piti opened a door into a cuisine I'd previously known almost nothing about. The aromatic with fresh herbs flavours are unlike anything in my usual rotation and I mean that positively. Azerbaijani cuisine reflects Turkic, Persian, and Caucasian influences meeting at a historical crossroads. Understa…

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E
Ella
· Jul 21, 2024
5/5

First time trying Piti — completely converted

I had never tried Piti before this visit and I wasn't sure what to expect. The richly layered taste hit immediately and made sense of the dish in a way descriptions never quite do. dried sour plums is an ingredient I'd not encountered used quite like this before. The a Baku meykhana restaurant sett…

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S
Sebastian
· Nov 07, 2023
5/5

Piti for a dinner party — went down extremely well

I made Piti for eight guests who had varying familiarity with the cuisine. Every single person asked for the recipe. The sweet-sour from fruit profile was the main talking point — no one had quite experienced pomegranate used that way before. tea drinking is a ritual — black tea served in armudu pe…

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I
Ingrid
· Sep 29, 2025
5/5

A dish that tells its story — Piti reviewed

You can taste history in Piti if you know what to look for. Azerbaijani cuisine reflects Turkic, Persian, and Caucasian influences meeting at a historical crossroads. The richly layered character reflects those layers — pomegranate doesn't appear by accident; it came from a specific tradition. The …

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M
Marcus
· Mar 26, 2025
3/5

Cooking class experience — learning Piti properly

I took a cooking class specifically to learn how to make Piti correctly. The instructor explained why chess herbs (dill, parsley, tarragon, mint) is used the way it is — something I'd never understood from just eating it. The richly layered result when you make it yourself is different. tea drinkin…

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