Kota Kokkala se Pita is dark chicken meat wrapped into a soft round, se pita meaning "in pita": chicken leg and thigh meat, the kokkala (bone-in dark cuts) rather than breast, rolled into a warmed flatbread at the souvlaki counter. The angle is the choice of cut. Thigh and leg meat carries more fat and connective texture than breast, so it stays juicy under the grill and through the wrap, and the whole appeal rests on a kitchen treating that as the point instead of a cheaper compromise.
The build is the standard wrap sequence applied to dark chicken. The leg and thigh meat, marinated and grilled over coals (sometimes carved from larger cooked pieces, sometimes off skewers), comes off hot and juicy with charred edges. The pita is warmed flat on the griddle until pliable and faintly blistered but never crisp. Tzatziki often goes down first as a moisture barrier, then the hot chicken along the length, then sliced tomato, raw onion, and a handful of fried patates run down the bread rather than bunched, before it is rolled tight and papered to hold its shape. Good execution keeps the dark meat moist with a real char, distributes it the length of the roll so the last bite has chicken, and keeps the tzatziki a thin barrier. Sloppy work overcooks even forgiving thigh meat until it goes dry and stringy, uses a cold or dry pita that cracks at the fold, or drowns the wrap so the base gives way early.
How it shifts is in the cut handling and the dressing. Some counters grill the dark meat on the bone and strip it to order for maximum juiciness; others pre-cook and hold it, which risks drying. Marinades range from lemon, oregano, and garlic to mustard or paprika-forward rubs. Fries in or out, tzatziki sometimes swapped for a spicier sauce. The breast-meat chicken wraps and the chicken gyros are their own builds and each deserves its own article rather than being crowded in here. What the dark-meat version reliably promises is a juicier, more forgiving chicken wrap, where the only real failure is overcooking the one cut that was supposed to stay moist.