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The Russian Tea Room is an Art Deco Russo-Continental restaurant, located at 150 West 57th Street (between Sixth Avenue and Seventh Avenue), between Carnegie Hall Tower and Metropolitan Tower, in the New York City borough of Manhattan.
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 12:24, 23 December 2010: 2,868 × 2,544 (1.55 MB): Jim.henderson {{Information |Description={{en|1=Looking east across 7th Ave and 49th at former Hawaiian Tropic Zone, now with signage for another restaurant.
A notable feature of Russian tea culture is the two-step brewing process. First, tea concentrate called zavarka (Russian: заварка) is prepared: a quantity of dry tea sufficient for several persons is brewed in a small teapot. Then, each person pours some quantity of this concentrate into the cup and mixes it with hot and cold water; thus ...
The Russian Tea Room, another iconic New York City restaurant — which isn't actually Russian at all — posted a statement of solidarity with Ukraine on its website and social media, condemning ...
Anna Nikolayevna Wolkova (Russian: Анна Николаевна Волкова; 17 April 1902 – 2 August 1973), sometimes known as Anna de Wolkoff, was a White Russian émigrée and convicted spy. She was secretary of The Right Club , which was opposed to Britain's involvement in World War II .
Metropolitan Tower had been nicknamed "the Russian Tea Room Annex", and a marketing manager said that about two-thirds of residential condominium buyers were Americans. [40] Construction was finished in 1987. That year, computer company Control Data Corporation leased 117,000 sq ft (10,900 m 2), nearly half of the building's office space. [74]
Interior of the Russian Tea Room in November 2009. Concord Management and Consulting – Russian company; Dacha Diner – Defunct restaurant in Seattle, Washington, U.S. Kachka – Russian restaurant in Portland, Oregon, U.S., Portland, Oregon; Moo Moo Restaurant – Restaurant chain Russia; Moscow Restaurant – Russian restaurant in Beijing
As the radio crackles with enemy communications that are hard to decipher, one Russian command rings out clear: “Brew five Chinese tea bags on 38 orange.” A Ukrainian soldier known on the ...