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Reviewed by Globetrotter from Virginia
3.13/5 rDev 0%
vibe: 3 | quality: 3 | service: 3.5 | selection: 3 | food: 3
3.13/5 rDev 0%
vibe: 3 | quality: 3 | service: 3.5 | selection: 3 | food: 3
Moscow's newest brewpub, located way out in a residential neighborhood some 25 minutes on foot from the end of a metro line. This is a good addition for those who live in the neighborhood, but I wouldn't recommend anyone making the effort to find this place.
Nice outdoor seating area in front. The entrance leads you into a large room (roughly 10 yards/meters by 12) with dark wooden tables and chairs arranged along the sides while the square bar sits in the middle (with no stools). There was enough seating for around 100. Downstairs was a big multi-purpose room: dance floor, huge movie screen, play area for kids on Sundays. The bathrooms were decent. The name refers to the Czech legend of Theresa and the Seven Crowns (ask me if you want to hear it). There's a rather frightening bronze statue of Theresa hanging from a pole in the center of the room, and long stained glass views of Prague on two walls. The ceiling feels low, even though it isn't, thanks to some pretty tacky lamps hanging down every 2 yards/meters or so. Interior walls and ceiling were yellow, while outside walls were red. Pop music was on the sound system. The place was about 1/4 full at 2:00 p.m. on a Tuesday (official "day off").
Eight taps, two of which are dedicated to the local product (a pale and a wheat). The other taps were Staropramen pale and dark, Budvar, Velvet, Spaten and Hoegarden. They had the proper logo glasses for the guest beers, and used straigh-walled, windowed half-liter mugs for both of their own beers (yes, even the wheat). The pale was served well, but the wheat was too warm in addition to being in the horribly wrong glassware. The food was plain in both presentation and taste. The service was pretty attentive.
Overall, an OK place, but certainly not worth going out of your way to get to, and pretty much everyone in Moscow would have to go out of their way to get here.
May 10, 2005Nice outdoor seating area in front. The entrance leads you into a large room (roughly 10 yards/meters by 12) with dark wooden tables and chairs arranged along the sides while the square bar sits in the middle (with no stools). There was enough seating for around 100. Downstairs was a big multi-purpose room: dance floor, huge movie screen, play area for kids on Sundays. The bathrooms were decent. The name refers to the Czech legend of Theresa and the Seven Crowns (ask me if you want to hear it). There's a rather frightening bronze statue of Theresa hanging from a pole in the center of the room, and long stained glass views of Prague on two walls. The ceiling feels low, even though it isn't, thanks to some pretty tacky lamps hanging down every 2 yards/meters or so. Interior walls and ceiling were yellow, while outside walls were red. Pop music was on the sound system. The place was about 1/4 full at 2:00 p.m. on a Tuesday (official "day off").
Eight taps, two of which are dedicated to the local product (a pale and a wheat). The other taps were Staropramen pale and dark, Budvar, Velvet, Spaten and Hoegarden. They had the proper logo glasses for the guest beers, and used straigh-walled, windowed half-liter mugs for both of their own beers (yes, even the wheat). The pale was served well, but the wheat was too warm in addition to being in the horribly wrong glassware. The food was plain in both presentation and taste. The service was pretty attentive.
Overall, an OK place, but certainly not worth going out of your way to get to, and pretty much everyone in Moscow would have to go out of their way to get here.
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