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When I was in East Berlin in '62, I and 3 fellow GI friends dropped into a restaurant there, "the Bucharest" and ordered a Soviet beer that was listed on the menu. The waiter replied that it "was not available" so I asked what he recommended. We ordered the Romanian beer and found that the label listed it at 14% alcohol. Needless to say, being in the Soviet Zone of Berlin, we each only had one beer.If I could find some here I'd certainly give it a shot. I've had Polish beer before, long ago enough I cant remember the label, but it was a really good lager. I bet with all their grain-fields the Ukrainians have brewing down pat too.
And I'd rather talk beer thn politics any day of the week, and two cans on Sunday.
When I was in East Berlin in '62, I and 3 fellow GI friends dropped into a restaurant there, "the Bucharest" and ordered a Soviet beer that was listed on the menu. The waiter replied that it "was not available" so I asked what he recommended. We ordered the Romanian beer and found that the label listed it at 14% alcohol. Needless to say, being in the Soviet Zone of Berlin, we each only had one beer.
I hope he's right.Ukraine war will be over by end of spring, country's deputy defence minister predicts
The retired major general says his nation will never stop fighting until victory and even a Russian nuclear strike would not end the struggle to drive out invading Kremlin forces.news.sky.com
POL dump?Someone smoking in St Petersburg
POL dump?
You're right, it would have been black.The smoke doesn't match that sort of fire.
Seems it's a gas pipelinePOL dump?
The blast caused disruption to the Severnaya Thermal Power Plant, which heats hundreds of thousands of homes at a time when temperatures are around minus 5C.
The plant provides electrical and thermal energy to factories, residential areas and public buildings in the northern part of the Vyborgsky and Kalininsky districts of St. Petersburg, as well as the settlements of Novoe Devyatkino and Murino, and the Vsevolozhsky district of the Leningrad region.
In total more than 800,000 people receive heat from the Severnaya plant.