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  2. Alcohol in Russia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcohol_in_Russia

    By 1859 vodka, the national drink, was the source of more than 40% of the government's revenue. ... Russia was one of the top alcohol-drinking countries in the world.

  3. Vodka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vodka

    The first written usage of the word vodka in an official Russian document in its modern meaning is dated by the decree of Empress Elizabeth of 8 June 1751, which regulated the ownership of vodka distilleries. By the 1860s, a government policy of promoting the consumption of state-manufactured vodka made it the drink of choice for many Russians.

  4. Prohibition in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prohibition_in_the_Russian...

    Lenin retained the prohibition, which remained in place through the Russian Civil War and into the period of Soviet Russia and the Soviet Union. However, following Lenin's death, Joseph Stalin repealed the prohibition in 1925 and brought back the state vodka monopoly system to increase government revenue. [4] [5]

  5. Beer in Russia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer_in_Russia

    In Russia, beer (Russian: пиво pivo) is tied with vodka as the most popular alcoholic drink in the country. The average Russian person drank about 11.7 liters of pure alcohol in 2016, with beer and vodka accounting for 39% each. [1] Russians categorize beer by color rather than fermentation process: Light, Red or Semi-Dark and Dark. [2]

  6. White Russian (cocktail) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Russian_(cocktail)

    Neither drink has any known Russian origin, but both are so-named due to vodka being the primary ingredient. It is unclear which drink preceded the other. [1] [2] The Oxford English Dictionary [3] refers to the first mention of white Russian in the sense of a cocktail as appearing in California's Oakland Tribune on November 21, 1965. [4]

  7. Alcohol preferences in Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcohol_preferences_in_Europe

    Vodka preference is sometimes associated exclusively with the Slavic countries of Central and Eastern Europe, as they are the historical homeland of vodka (Poland and Russia being the nations most often associated with the invention of the drink). Before the 19th century, vodka was considered very much a "people's drink" that was common among ...

  8. Vodka protests of 1858–1859 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vodka_protests_of_1858–1859

    The protests originated in September 1858 in the Kovno Governorate, a Catholic province of Tsarist Lithuania, where local villagers took oaths to abstain from drinking vodka, and all other hard liquors except for 'medicinal purposes'. [2] Non-distilled alcohol, such as wine or beer, was still permitted. [2]

  9. Stolichnaya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stolichnaya

    Stolichnaya's chief rival Russian Standard questioned the SPI-produced Stolichnaya's Russian authenticity, because it is bottled in Latvia, not Russia. Stolichnaya's global distributor Pernod Ricard responded by insisting that it is an authentic Russian vodka, because nothing is added or removed during the bottling. [36]