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Some of the World’s best vodka – an Eastern European Tour

Guide to vodka

Guide to vodka

“There are various issues that bring home to me, as a bad-tempered, middle-aged person, my utter estrangement from the’ youth’….one is vodka. A survey has revealed that Brits now prefer vodka to whisky or gin. How did that happen? Vodka: the petrol-tasting substance Russians used to drink in small glasses that they would then throw into the fireplace before bursting aggressively into tears.”

-Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian, 15 March 2017

 

 

Luckily for me, I’m neither middle-aged or estranged from ‘youth’! Times move on, and vodka is a different drink these days.

The World’s Best Vodka winners are being announced today so we’re having some with our beetroot-infused, lax-topped blini– but which to choose? This year’s winner (2017), both overall, and in the ‘neutral’ category, is Nemiroff / Premium De Luxe from the Ukraine. But there are a host of others to try, for one reason or another.

I’m off on a culinary tour of eastern Europe this summer so I’m researching which brands I should be seeking out in each of my stop off points. I’m starting in the UK and coming back via Berlin, so I’ve included vodkas from both those countries as well. And none of the vodkas below, I promise, taste of petrol.

 

What about flavoured vodkas? Why are they not included?

I sat next to an elderly gent some years ago at dinner. I’d heard he had an interest in vodka and I mentioned a famous London restaurant where they offered a whole selection of different flavoured ones as a pre-prandial. I mentioned that I especially liked one with a black pepper flavour. He turned to me with ill-disguised disgust. “The really good stuff isn’t flavoured” he told me stiffly.

A few decades later I had a chance to savour a few of the non-flavoured vodkas of which he spoke while ‘researching’ in the Vodka Museum in St Petersburg. I began to see, or rather taste, what he meant. So this guide, with one exception, does not include flavoured vodkas. Serve these simply, plain and cold.

 

Here are the best that I’ve unearthed:

 

Best vodka from the UK

 

Best vodka from Sweden

 

Sweden’s award winning Absolut Elyx – it deserves a medal for the packaging…

 

Best vodka from Estonia

 

Best vodka from Latvia

 

Best vodka from Lithuania

 

Best vodka from Belarus

 

Best vodka from Poland

 


“This [Belvedere] is distilled and bottled in Poland, made from 100% rye grain, which gives it a sharp, caraway breeziness, and it has the softness of fine angora.”

Victoria Moore, How to Drink


 

 

Iconic and award-winning Snow Leopard vodka – part of the profits are donated to saving these beautiful animals from extinction.

 

Best vodka from Slovenia

 

Best vodka from Germany

 


“Snowdrifts had swaddled Voronezh a couple of days before; now the city glittered under a crust of ice. Light streamed from every surface…’It must be about twenty, I suppose,’ he said, peeling layers of clothing from me. ‘The perfect temperature- everything looks wonderful, it’s too cold to work, the vodka’s chilled by the times it’s home from the kiosk…'”

-Charlotte Hobson, Black Earth City


 

This post is dedicated to Quintin Hoare.

 

Amazing Blavod black vodka

 

 

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