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Restaurant review in the year of our lord 20250215.
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D
2025-02-15 22:36:23 UTC
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Dear rfc:ers,

After successfully blocking any valentines attempts from the wife on the
14:th, I had to give in for some peace of mind on the 15:th, so I decided
to take her to the excellent one star michelin restaurant
https://demoloftas.lt/.

I highly recommend it to anyone who happens to visit.

We had the farmers menu:

"Our farmer¢s table experience celebrates the art of fresh, local
ingredients. each day, our chefs craft a unique menu inspired by the
finest seasonal produce. enjoy five appetizers designed for shar- ing,
followed by your choice of main course. This dining experience lasts ap-
proximately two hours."

The dishes are too complex to describe, but some high lights were:

* The butter! Home made butter with smoked eel whipped into it. It was
absolutely divine!

* The bread! A freshly baked rye bread, with bees wax. The bees wax gave
it a combination of crunchiness and chewyness. It was "the bees knees"!

* The dessert! A caramel rice pudding with small pieces of crispy rice,
cherry, and to balance the sweetness with some salt, sturgeon kaviar.
Amazing!!

Apart from that, various smaller dishes of seasonal vegetables (root
veggies mainly), marinated shrimp.

We had non-alcoholic sparkling wine with it, and I had an espresso as
well. Total price for two was 220 EUR.
gm
2025-02-16 21:36:07 UTC
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Post by D
Dear rfc:ers,
After successfully blocking any valentines attempts from the wife on the
14:th, I had to give in for some peace of mind on the 15:th, so I decided
to take her to the excellent one star michelin restaurant
https://demoloftas.lt/.
Post by D
I highly recommend it to anyone who happens to visit.
AH, very nice...!!!

I was overjoyed to see the Baltics get their independence after horrible
Nazi and Soviet rule... those people suffered terribly...

They are now nice and prosperous places...

Even during Soviet times, the Baltic states had a far higher standard of
living than the rest of the USSR... the Soviets in fact considered the
Baltic states "our abroad", as these states were as close to a "Western"
place as existed in the USSR... a holiday on the Lithuanian coast was
considered a real treat, as were holidays to all the Baltics...

The Baltics had some "high - tech" industries, e.g. communications
equipment, electronics, appliances that supplied the USSR...

Also, in Estonia people could receive Finnish TV, it was the only place
in the entire USSR that had such a "window to the West"...

Lithuanian is a very interesting language... it's a "proto - European"
language IIRC, with ancient roots, including from Sanskrit...

Did you know that Chicago has many Lithuanians, and Chicago is
considered "the second - largest Lithuanian city in the world", after
Vilnius...???

There are a number of Lithuanian restos and bakeries here... mainly on
the southwest side of Chicago... but these are somewhat decreasing as
the older folks pass on and their descendants move to the suburbs and
elsewhere...

IIRC there ia an honorary Lithuanian consul here...

And this was MAGNIFICENT, so proud of what these people did...!!!

Baltic Way:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baltic_Way

"The Baltic Way (Lithuanian: Baltijos kelias; Latvian: Baltijas ceļš;
Estonian: Balti kett) or Baltic Chain (also "Chain of Freedom"[1]) was a
peaceful political demonstration that occurred on 23 August 1989...

Approximately two million people joined their hands to form a human
chain spanning 690 kilometres (430 mi) across the three Baltic states of
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, which at the time were occupied and
annexed by the USSR and had a combined population of approximately eight
million...

The central government in Moscow considered the three Baltic countries
constituent republics of the Soviet Union...

The demonstration originated in "Black Ribbon Day" protests held in the
western cities in the 1980s. It marked the 50th anniversary of the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, in which Poland, Finland, Estonia, Latvia,
Lithuania, and Romania were (as "spheres of influence") divided between
the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany. The Soviet-Nazi pact led to the
outbreak of World War II in September 1939 and the Soviet invasion and
occupation of the Baltic countries in June 1940..."

--
GM

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D
2025-02-17 13:00:42 UTC
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Post by D
Post by D
Dear rfc:ers,
After successfully blocking any valentines attempts from the wife on the
14:th, I had to give in for some peace of mind on the 15:th, so I decided
to take her to the excellent one star michelin restaurant
https://demoloftas.lt/.
Post by D
I highly recommend it to anyone who happens to visit.
AH, very nice...!!!
I was overjoyed to see the Baltics get their independence after horrible
Nazi and Soviet rule... those people suffered terribly...
This is the truth!
Post by D
They are now nice and prosperous places...
Yes! The incomes are several times higher than russian incomes, showing what is
possible with peace and capitalism. Note that since they joined the EU, the
growth of the economy is now stalling again. It seems they got to enjoy a few
free years, before being swallowed by the EU instead. =/
Post by D
Even during Soviet times, the Baltic states had a far higher standard of
living than the rest of the USSR... the Soviets in fact considered the
Baltic states "our abroad", as these states were as close to a "Western"
place as existed in the USSR... a holiday on the Lithuanian coast was
considered a real treat, as were holidays to all the Baltics...
This is still a thing! Haven't been myself, but the wifes sister and mother
often go to the sea during the summer. It is quite a party place, and eastern
european women are some of the hottest on the planet! =D
Post by D
The Baltics had some "high - tech" industries, e.g. communications
equipment, electronics, appliances that supplied the USSR...
I heard, but I do not know if it is true, that the true creators of sputnik were
the lithuanians and the ukrainians, and that the russians just took everything
and presented it as their own.

My accountant worked during communist times, with reverse engineering IBM
mainframes so that the communists could build pirate copies and run stolen IBM
software on them.
Post by D
Also, in Estonia people could receive Finnish TV, it was the only place
in the entire USSR that had such a "window to the West"...
Lithuanian is a very interesting language... it's a "proto - European"
language IIRC, with ancient roots, including from Sanskrit...
This is the truth! Completely incomprehensible and very, very complicated to
learn.
Post by D
Did you know that Chicago has many Lithuanians, and Chicago is
considered "the second - largest Lithuanian city in the world", after
Vilnius...???
There are a number of Lithuanian restos and bakeries here... mainly on
the southwest side of Chicago... but these are somewhat decreasing as
the older folks pass on and their descendants move to the suburbs and
elsewhere...
I lived in chicago for a year but had no idea! I learned, while I was there,
that there is a big polish population, and a block or two called Andersonville
where some early swedish immigrants settled. I really enjoyed living in Chicago.
More relaxed and peaceful than New York, yet plenty of people, services, live
music, and a nice beach just a 20 minutes walk from where I lived, in a basement
apartment close to Lincoln Park. Ahh... the memories of youth! =D
Post by D
IIRC there ia an honorary Lithuanian consul here...
And this was MAGNIFICENT, so proud of what these people did...!!!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baltic_Way
"The Baltic Way (Lithuanian: Baltijos kelias; Latvian: Baltijas ceČš;
Estonian: Balti kett) or Baltic Chain (also "Chain of Freedom"[1]) was a
peaceful political demonstration that occurred on 23 August 1989...
Approximately two million people joined their hands to form a human
chain spanning 690 kilometres (430 mi) across the three Baltic states of
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, which at the time were occupied and
annexed by the USSR and had a combined population of approximately eight
million...
This is very impressive. My wife and her parents joined in this.
Post by D
The central government in Moscow considered the three Baltic countries
constituent republics of the Soviet Union...
The demonstration originated in "Black Ribbon Day" protests held in the
western cities in the 1980s. It marked the 50th anniversary of the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, in which Poland, Finland, Estonia, Latvia,
Lithuania, and Romania were (as "spheres of influence") divided between
the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany. The Soviet-Nazi pact led to the
outbreak of World War II in September 1939 and the Soviet invasion and
occupation of the Baltic countries in June 1940..."
My wifes late grandmother lived under 5 rulers. Lithuanian, soviet, nazi, soviet
and lithuanian.
Post by D
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GM
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