Do you love Russian food?

Do you love Russian food?

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I never tried russian food

Kiyev chicken is hohol.

Invented by French chief in Petersburg?

You've never tried your own shit either. Some things are best left alone.

Eh ben merde t'es violent toi

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that actually looks good, name?

Ukraine is the second France.
St. Petersbourg is not Russia.

Chicken Kiev
Shut up schizo

Based nomad

Typical hohol gastarbaiting in Hungary.

Post Russian food

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Dumplings are somewhat universal, tho russian variation probably is the most refined

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kiev kotlet isn't russian, but yeah, it's good

local variety of an originally chinese food iirc (or was it mongol?). anyway, add a little sour cream, salt and black pepper and pelmeni is good as a hang over cure

Russian thieves again stole some Austrian dish?

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That's not pelmeni, that's varenniki
Also that's like saying ravioli are chinese dumplings
Solyanka

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i didn't zoom in, you're right. but that's not what i said. the original method of preserving meat in a small flour based pocket came from somewhere in asia and took on many forms. ravioli and chinese dumpling being only two of them. gyoza for example is another. so is hinkali

i like eating russian pussy

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Not pictured: kot

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Bad taste Jang.

Not sure if it's actually Russian but we call it Russian salad

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Yes, borsch is a godsend.

Based
I like lohikeitto

Borsht is a stupid Ukrainian simplification of based sour schi.

T'as fait que moi aussi, moi chui pas les affai
HEY MOI CHUI PAS UNGATAI !!!!!!!!!!!!!
Ti a vu un péti blain ti é allé l'emeldé, moi yé vé t'enlever ton calçon et te basier la maintenant.

Some frenchie chief, who had his own restaurant in Russia created it.

There's a small russian food shop here. I've been there once and buyed smoked fishes. They were bretty gud

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Ask them about dried fish

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r*ssian food is just terrible

I can't even name worse cuisine desu

Please post a list of the food you had ever taste

Fuck this looks good

Okroshka- chilled summer soup
You can have it with either kvass or kefir

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Mushroom juliene
(It's cheese on top and mushrooms, cream and sometimes chicken inside)

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Grigori's mother made them. They were delicious

Who's Grigori?

Looks French

Ukha.
The one and only Russian food that includes vodka

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My best child hood friend. Dutch father, Russian mother. She spanked the shit out of him, but usually not in front of me.

cool

youtube.com/watch?v=9hcKBL-9xac

Borscht is great but, among former Soviet countries, Uzbekistan has the best food.

Nothing can beat lagmon and plov

Wow, Finnish food looks like THAT?

t. uzbek

>video is 12min
>reply in 4min
hide and saged

I watched it at x4 speed

We incorporated plov into Russian cuisine, we make it at home.
Georgian cuisine is richier than Uzbek one by the way.

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We incorporated it too, chebureki is usual street food in Russia. Lovely thing from Central Asian USSR republics. youtube.com/watch?v=B0gSyBV2DTY

Microwaved pelmeni

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Add onions, and fry. Then add mayo and ketchup.

Georgian food is great too (khinkali is gem for sure) but Uzbek food seems to have more spice and I personally like food with spice.

No, it originated in the Russian Empire.

Nonono, Uzbek food have more indian-style spices, Georgian food is more mexican-style spices. We have two different words in Russian for that - пpяный и ocтpый. But you of course made it one word, what should I expect from the language where Russian ethnicity and Russian nationality is the same word?

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look who is talking
you don't even have a word for privacy

> пpяный и ocтpый
google says it is spicy and hot. two separate words, retard

No, you fucking can't.
It's kvass, no options.

We have a word for soul you never could translate right.

Anyway, most of the mutts could understand only Mexican style spicy and don't use the word "hot" at all.

I love salmon and ikra
so I wanna eat that dish
pic related

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We never eat it with ikra.
We eat it with jam, Russian sourcream, honey, bacon, meat.

>Uzbek food have more indian-style spices
I agree
>Georgian food is more mexican-style spices.
Hmmm, interesting, I didn't get that impression. I mostly had khachapuri and khinkali. Also, I found Georgian wine to be great, possibly on the par with French or California wine while much cheaper

I wish there was a Russian store nearby so I could bulk on pelmeni. I know it's not technically Russian but shashlik is amazing, had it homemade at the dacha when I was in Russia.

I only know boeuf stroganoff. It's really good.

>don't use the word "hot" at all.
the fuck are you talking about. ever heard of a "hot sauce"? it is a common word. and food can be both hot and spicy. "spicy chicken" for example is a cliche as well. exact same concepts. we just don't know or care about whatever georgian or uzbek or whatever shit is popular in russia.

>khachapuri and khinkali.
Ah, that's two almost neutral meals from Georgian food, that's why your impression is this.
Try chakhokhbili, satsivi, ajika, and KHARCHO soup.
youtube.com/watch?v=vGDDF9z8p0M skip to 4:15

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Mutts never eat this delicious thing.

I do.
Plenty of people eat blini with ikra

i like UKRAINIAN food

Salo?

We like Pirozhki (пиpoжки) very much
But we often put food that we want to eat in Pirozhki
So Pirozhki which was cooked by Japanese may look very strange for Russian ^^;

cookpad.com/search/ピロシキ

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I doubt it.
Pirozhki have so many different kinds, sorts and variations in Russia.

how do you call it in nipponese?

Oh, I don't know it
We think genuine Russian Pirozhki are made of meat and onion like this
ntv.co.jp/3min/recipe/20100211.html

ピロシキ piroshiki
But we call щи シチー (sichii)
So ピロシキ(piroshiki) may have another pronounce in Russia ^^;

It's really really crazy to think about the fact that I haven't had any Russian dishes in my life and there is/has been not a single Russian restaurant around where I live, although I live in Niigata city, which is located right across the continent and just a Sea of Japan away from Russia.

I believe even Tokyo has few too.

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fuck, thats a cold place you are at. russians love japanese food and eat more japanese food than they do russian.

in russia, even hamburgers are more popular than russian kutleti (better than burgers). even pizza is more popular than gruzinski katchapuri.

russian food is not very popular, in russia and the world, senpai

How much is a house in Niigata and can a foreigner buy one and live there?

Ah, meat and onion is one of the most popular kinds, on par with
potato and onion
potato and onion and mushrooms
mushrooms and onion
cabbage and eggs
cabbage and onion
apples
lattuce and eggs
rice

>eat more japanese food than they do russian.
Also Russians listen to enka, wear 下駄 and love sumo wrestling.

>potato and onion
>potato and onion and mushrooms
>mushrooms and onion
Those look delicious (^q^)

>cabbage and eggs
>cabbage and onion
>lattuce and eggs
Those are like salad

>apples
It look like sweets
But it may be tasty

>rice
wat?! Σ(゚∀゚ノ)ノ

>Russians sell out to foreign stuff
i can understand how easy it was for Gorbachov to sell USSR out and move to Florida.

>>potato and onion
>>potato and onion and mushrooms
>>mushrooms and onion
>Those look delicious (^q^)
Most of the mushrooms is very different from Japanese.

>>cabbage and eggs
>>cabbage and onion
>>lattuce and eggs
>Those are like salad
Cabbage is stewed, eggs are boiled, lattuce is fresh. We don't eat salads of such ingredients, but maybe Japanese do, Idk. We eat salads with fresh cabbage. We eat stewed cabbage as a side dish or primary dish.

>>apples
>It look like sweets
>But it may be tasty
Sweet pirozhki are present in many flavours. Almost all of berries and fruits are used.

>>rice
>wat?! Σ(゚∀゚ノ)ノ
Rice and eggs and lattuce, yes. One of the most popular kind of pirozhki.

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s'risom and huy sauce is popular

About 10-20 million JPY (like 10,000-20,000 USD) for a pretty standard new house.
30 million for a modern luxury apartment at the heart of the city or a pretty big house equipped with a handy spacious garage and full of nature, all of which are unimaginable in Tokyo.

Second hand houses are nice and popular too as they are much cheaper even ones near the central part.

>How much is a house in Niigata and can a foreigner buy one and live there?
Of course we have a lot of foreigners living in the city.
But generally speaking I guess it's quite hard to settle in Japan for foreigners who don't speak Japanese at all or who aren't married to a Japanese partner, no matter how much money they've got in their bank accounts.

>(like 10,000-20,000 USD)
woops add one more zero to each

>100,000 USD = 10 million JPY
thanks, whats a good site to search these deals?

>it's quite hard to settle in Japan for foreigners who don't speak Japanese at all or who aren't married to a Japanese partner

how do i find a Japanese qt 3.14 virgin waifu?
do you have a sister?

So cheap.
Actually it's not hard to get Japanese citizenship if you live in Japan. It was hard 20 years ago.

russia should be cheap as well, but greed destroyed the people of the West.

in 2000 you could buy a house in NYC, LA or Bay Area for $170,000

>it's not hard to get Japanese citizenship if you live in Japan
you have to pass the language exam, which is hard

If you don't know Japanese well what's the point to live there? Japanese people don't know any other languages.
To get Chinese citizenship is way harder no matter how good is your Chinese

Absolutely this

can an amerilard move to russia with minimal knowledge of polish?

how much is a house in your city?

Knowledge of polish wouldn't help you with Russian at all.
Moscow commieblock is 3000 USD for 1 square meter.

shit, thats more expensive than NYC. I will wait until they re-establish the USSR so I can get a free flat in Moscow.

In USSR you had a right to 9 square meters and you had to stay in line waiting for that 9 meters for 10-20 years. But it was free, right.

This cake's name is Siberia.

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Russian "Prague" cake.

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I miss Russia so much now.