It was somewhat unexpected to find a cafe with that name in Bosnia, where there are not as many Russians as in neighboring Serbia, but it is focused more on locals than on visitors. There was no full house on Thursday evening, but the cafe was not empty either. Apart from portraits of the main character of the institution, who looks at you from everywhere (menu, sugar bags, an envelope for cutlery, napkins and a full-length figure at the entrance), almost nothing else is connected with Russia. The menu has pizza "Putin" and burger "Moscow", there are no dishes of Russian cuisine, background music is also not connected with Russia in any way. Unless the waiters respond to "thank you" in Russian with "please" with a local accent. Delicious, expensive (expensive for Banya Luka, not for Moscow).
Ugh, what a nightmare, it's disgusting. I write like a Russian woman. Let's make a cafe with the one who bullied you, too? Thank God you misspelled the letter T and your restaurant (packed with people) is actually called Pushin