As I entered this establishment, I expected strength, discipline, and at the very least, real…read morepotatoes. Instead, I was met with instant mashed potatoes--soft, weak, entirely without character. This is not the cuisine of a proud people; this is the cuisine of surrender.
The beet salad with vinaigrette, which should have been chilled like the Siberian winter, arrived warm--lukewarm, indecisive, unsure of its place in the world. Unacceptable.
The dishes looked impressive, yes--like a military parade photographed from far away--but when it came to flavor, they had less impact than sanctions from Luxembourg. No power. No strategy. No soul.
As I sat waiting for the staff, they took their own dinner break, demonstrating the type of "strategic pause" I do not endorse. I was ignored with the precision of a carefully designed protocol.
The borscht, the pride of Slavic cuisine, arrived without vinegar, without sugar--without identity. A borscht without conviction. A red soup without purpose.
The vereniki were filled with instant potatoes--again!--and the sour cream was rationed like a state secret, one micro dollop adrift in a silver gravy boat.
For 24 years they claim to be the best Russian food in CDMX. Maybe because it was at times the only Russian food? I assure you, comrades, this is misinformation of the highest order. No true Russian would recognize this food, except perhaps as a warning.
The staff was polite--good. But even a pleasant smile cannot cover the fact that a school cafeteria steam table could outmatch this place in both flavor and spirit.
If you desire these so-called "culinary delights," then by all means, march forward.
But for the rest of you: save your rubles.
Nyet.