North Korean restaurant offering lobster and live music opens in Moscow

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North Korean restaurant offering lobster and live music opens in Moscow

Women wearing hanbok (traditional Korean dress) perform at a newly opened North Korean restaurant in Moscow, Russia, in this photo uploaded on Facebook by the Russian Embassy to North Korea on Nov. 28. The restaurant reportedly opened on Nov. 26. [RUSSIAN EMBASSY]

Women wearing hanbok (traditional Korean dress) perform at a newly opened North Korean restaurant in Moscow, Russia, in this photo uploaded on Facebook by the Russian Embassy to North Korea on Nov. 28. The restaurant reportedly opened on Nov. 26. [RUSSIAN EMBASSY]

 
Lobster platters, Pyongyang cold noodles and a live North Korean musical troupe greeted guests in Moscow this week as North Korea opened a new restaurant in the heart of the Russian capital.
 
The Russian Embassy to North Korea said on Facebook Thursday that "the long-awaited opening of the Korean restaurant 'Seungri,' which translates to 'Victory,'" opened on Wednesday.
 

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Russian and North Korean government officials attended the opening, along with Russian lawmakers, North Korean scholars and journalists, the embassy said.
 
Leonid Slutsky, leader of the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, told guests he hoped “Victory will become a cultural hub that introduces not only a variety of excellent North Korean dishes but also the traditions, food and songs of our brotherly peoples.”
 
Russian Ambassador to North Korea Alexander Matsegora delivered congratulatory remarks and offered a toast.
 
Pedestrians walk by a newly opened North Korean restaurant in Moscow, Russia, in this photo uploaded on Facebook by the Russian Embassy to North Korea on Nov. 28. [RUSSIAN EMBASSY]

Pedestrians walk by a newly opened North Korean restaurant in Moscow, Russia, in this photo uploaded on Facebook by the Russian Embassy to North Korea on Nov. 28. [RUSSIAN EMBASSY]

 
Photos released by the embassy showed traditional North Korean dishes such as Pyongyang-style buckwheat cold noodles served alongside lobster and assorted raw fish. 
 
Bottles of whiskey, wine and cocktails were set across the tables, and North Korean women in hanbok (traditional Korean dress) or white suits performed with instruments including the janggu (traditional hourglass-shaped drum) and guitar.
 
Diners are seated at a newly opened North Korean restaurant in Moscow, Russia, on Nov. 26 in this photo uploaded on Facebook by the Russian Embassy to North Korea on Nov. 28. [RUSSIAN EMBASSY]

Diners are seated at a newly opened North Korean restaurant in Moscow, Russia, on Nov. 26 in this photo uploaded on Facebook by the Russian Embassy to North Korea on Nov. 28. [RUSSIAN EMBASSY]

 
North Korea has operated restaurants in Russia before. One named Koryo was believed to have opened in Moscow around 2009 to 2010.
 
Another restaurant, Pyongyang-gwan, or "Pyongyang Restaurant," opened in southeastern Moscow in September and reportedly serves kimchi, ramyeon and bibimbap as well as other South Korean and North Korean dishes.
 
A woman wearing hanbok (traditional Korean dress) plays the janggu (traditional drum) while a woman in a suit plays the guitar at a newly opened North Korean restaurant in Moscow, Russia, on Nov. 26 in this photo uploaded to Facebook by the Russian Embassy to North Korea on Nov. 28. [RUSSIAN EMBASSY IN THE DPRK]

A woman wearing hanbok (traditional Korean dress) plays the janggu (traditional drum) while a woman in a suit plays the guitar at a newly opened North Korean restaurant in Moscow, Russia, on Nov. 26 in this photo uploaded to Facebook by the Russian Embassy to North Korea on Nov. 28. [RUSSIAN EMBASSY IN THE DPRK]



This article was originally written in Korean and translated by a bilingual reporter with the help of generative AI tools. It was then edited by a native English-speaking editor. All AI-assisted translations are reviewed and refined by our newsroom.
BY KIM EUN-BIN [[email protected]]
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