For Nika Khotcholava, team member at Leftbank club in Tbilisi, the answer is always Georgian food
I never eat right after a party or rave. I always wait for the morning. What I eat depends on how I treat my body during the night. That makes all the difference, because my behavior at the party defines what I will eat the next day. I live in Tbilisi, Georgia. Here, the traditions of dealing with a hangover, headache, or dizziness after heavy drinking go back centuries.
Like every Georgian, I rely on one thing: khinkali. Khinkali is not just a tasty dumpling, it is sacred food, a ritual in itself. No matter how rough I feel after a rave, the morning choice is always clear. The only real question is which restaurant to go to. People endlessly argue about which place serves the best khinkali, and everyone has their own favorite. The broth inside khinkali works like medicine for hangovers.
There are other essentials too. I, like many others, love chikhirtma, a traditional Georgian chicken soup. Then there is khashi, the ultimate old-school hangover cure. It is made from pork feet, served with milk and garlic. Two spoonfuls of it, followed by a shot of chacha, and the hangover is gone.
So, my answer is Georgian cuisine. You would have to be foolish to live in Georgia and eat anything else the next morning. It is almost a science: khinkali, chikhirtma, khashi, Nabeglavi mineral water, and chacha. With these, it feels as if the previous night never happened.