Chifir

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File:Bodrost cefyras.jpg
Preparation of chifir in an enamel mug

Chifir (Template:Langx, or alternatively, Script error: No such module "Lang". (Script error: No such module "lang".)) is an exceptionally strong tea, associated with and brewed in Soviet and post-Soviet detention facilities such as gulags and prisons.

Some sources mention properties of a light drug, causing addiction.

Etymology

The etymology is uncertain but is thought to come from the word Script error: No such module "lang". (Script error: No such module "Lang".) meaning a strong Caucasian wine, or a Siberian word for wine that has gone off and become sour and acidic.[1]

Preparation

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Chifir is typically prepared with 5–8 tablespoons (50–100 ml) of loose tea (or tea bags) per person poured on top of the boiled water. Script error: No such module "Unsubst". It is brewed without stirring – at least until the leaves drop to the bottom of the cup.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". During the brewing process, the leaves start to release adenine and guanine into the water, which does not happen during traditional tea-making.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Sugar is sometimes added; the nature of the brew tends to result in a bitter flavor.[2]

It is to be carefully sipped, otherwise it may cause vomiting.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Ultimately, making chifir involves brewing a great deal of black tea and for a long time. It may be left to brew overnight and drunk either hot or cold.

In popular culture

  • Irina Ratushinskaya describes the brewing of narcotically strong chifir as a banned activity sometimes undertaken by prisoners, in her memoir of her years as a political prisoner, Grey Is The Colour Of Hope.
  • In the Gabriele Salvatores-directed film Deadly Code, the character played by John Malkovich prepares and describes chifir to the young Kolyma.

See also

References

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