It was recently announced that Poland would soon play host to its own vodka museum. It might be 600 years late, but good things come to those who wait.
Although no official launch
date has yet been given, reports in the daily newspaper Fakt state that
Warsaw’s Bohemian district, Praga, is set to open a new museum dedicated to the
nation’s most renowned brew. Not only will the facility be a tourist
attraction, the facility will lend legitimacy that Poland, not Russia, invented
the libation.
The actual location and
facilities are yet to be chosen states the paper, however the total cost is
expected to amount to approximately $10 Million. With the help of foreign
investment, the museum will offer visitors the chance to witness how the drink
is created, from the fermentation to the bottling process.
Andrzej Szumowski, President
of the Polish Association of Vodka, has already praised the project, comparing
it to a number of other similar museums across the globe.
“The Scots have a museum
dedicated to whiskey. The Mexicans have a museum for tequila and the French can
boast one for their champagne. We here should also be very proud of our
national drink, vodka,” he told Gazeta Wyborcza.
He went on to add that this
is the perfect time to introduce such a place of interest. “A lot has changed
during recent years and this the perfect time to open a museum dedicated to
vodka, as Poles are finally embracing the drinking culture,” he told the
newspaper. Szumowski went on to say, “Warsaw is our heart and it was becoming
short of breath. This is a serious project, not a joke. I am happy that this
kind of culture is coming back to Praga.”
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