I wanted coffee urgently (we were playing tennis and needed to cheer up). We walked near the courts and came across Coffee at Isolde's. Actually, Isolde herself made us coffee! Charming Isolde, excellent coffee (cheered up and ran around excitedly!), we will continue to go and drink coffee only to her! We recommend it!
A small cup of coffee for 150 rubles will do. The second seller, apparently Isolde's daughter, works as reluctantly as possible. Everyone is busy with their own business except the store. They speak either in Russian or in their own language. There are no price tags, as if he comes up with the cost at the moment: this loaf is one hundred, or two hundred, or three hundred. And so a pie with "cabbage" for 100 rubles turned out to be with potatoes. It tastes strange, even though I love potato pies. A triangle with meat is the only delicious thing from the entire assortment, even if it is 200 rubles. Anywhere exactly the same or more filling would be 50-70p. Khachapur is a piece of bread and a millimeter layer of cheese on half of this flatbread. Just bread for 300 rubles. Absolutely dissatisfied and upset. These stalls are even more expensive than going to a decent cafe.
Every time I take another friend from my homeland to Abkhazia, I always stop and offer to drink coffee at Isolde's. No matter how long our journey is, 5 minutes in this cafe opens up the world of hospitable Abkhazia to my friends. The very taste of coffee brewed on sand, sausage or juicer, sun or rain is the beginning of our happy day🌿 Isolda, thank you🩷 for the 4th
year, all my friends start their day in Abkhazia with your coffee shop💚