Russia's Strange Bread-sniffing Ritual - BBC Travel

Skip to content
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Culture
  • Arts
  • Travel
  • Earth
  • Audio
  • Video
  • Live
HomeNewsSportBusinessTechnologyHealthCultureArtsTravelEarthAudioVideoLiveWeatherNewslettersRussia’s strange bread-sniffing ritual13 February 2019ShareSaveSophie HarrisFeatures correspondentShareSave
Jonny Donovan Some believe that sniffing bread helps to soak up the alcohol and offset the taste of the vodka (Credit: Jonny Donovan)Jonny Donovan
Some believe that sniffing bread helps to soak up the alcohol and offset the taste of the vodka (Credit: Jonny Donovan)

Investigating why Russian people sniff bread while drinking vodka offers a portal into the realities of Russian life at a time when sympathetic cultural insight is sorely lacking.

“Somebody in Bristol started making a vodka called Novichok,” said our host, Natasha Ward, faux-scandalised at the reference to the toxic nerve agent. “And they were immediately told, ‘Stop it at once!’” She laughed as she finished setting the table for the day’s gathering in her home in South London, introducing the dishes as one might introduce guests at a party. “We start with herring, salted, not pickled – English people hate beetroot because they’ve only ever met it in this horrible vinegar, and those rollmop herrings that look like corpses, you know?”

Ward is a master of moving between cultures. She’s half-Russian, half-English, and has worked as an interpreter for such diverse parties as the United Nations, Angelina Jolie and Mikhail Gorbachev. Today’s task – explaining exactly why Russian people might sniff bread while drinking vodka – may not be quite so starry, but it does offer a portal into the realities of Russian life at a time when sympathetic cultural insight is sorely lacking.

Jonny Donovan The Russian tradition of sniffing bread while drinking vodka offers a portal into the realities of Russian life (Credit: Jonny Donovan)Jonny Donovan
The Russian tradition of sniffing bread while drinking vodka offers a portal into the realities of Russian life (Credit: Jonny Donovan)

You may also be interested in:

• Why you should never drink whisky on the rocks

• The dessert you can’t make alone

• Why Scotland loves haggis

To armchair observers, relations between Russia and the West currently seem cartoonishly chilly; there was more than a touch of Cold War frost to recent news reports about the Russian and American withdrawal from a nuclear weapons treaty, the Salisbury nerve agent poisonings in the UK and, of course, the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

“We were happy when the Russian football team finally lost,” said Anna Ivanov, while her husband Misha shrugged. Anna and Misha are the parents of Ward’s best friend, Helena Bayliss, and the couple moved here from Russia 20 years ago when their daughter married an Englishman. “When the team were winning, there was so much hot air in everything the media said. The mouth didn’t shut for a moment!”

“Now,” Ward said, “which vodka shall we start with?”

It’s said that sniffing bread soaks up the alcohol and offsets the taste

The choice was impressive, as it should be. Russia, after all, is the birthplace of the chemist Dmitri Mendeleev, who created the Periodic Table and is also said to have perfected the recipe for vodka as strictly 40% proof (a popular myth but a fun story). Accordingly, Ward offered fiery pertsovka vodka made with chillies, plain Russian vodka, vodka made in Newfoundland as part of a new venture by Hollywood actor Dan Aykroyd and homemade limonaya (lemon) vodka. “This is actually medical alcohol which is 95% proof,” said Ward matter-of-factly, “which you then water down, half and half, and add lemon.” Moonshine, in other words? “No, if it was moonshine we’d have to have a still.” Bayliss started laughing. “Natasha, you disappoint!”

Our little company was assembled for two reasons: firstly, to have a convivial time; and secondly, to get the bottom of the Russian vodka ritual – a time-honoured tradition that has social drinkers sniffing bread in the name of propriety.

It’s not something you sip and savour

To begin, both the vodka and the glasses were retrieved from the freezer, and Bayliss outlined the essentials for drinking vodka, Russian-style. “Vodka should be cold, glass should be tiny and there must be something salty, or rye bread, to follow,” she said. “There’s no point in drinking vodka and following it with an eclair, it doesn’t work”. “Or,” added Ward, “God forbid, following it with nothing!”

The freezing temperature of the drink is a no-brainer; it sends the shot down the throat more comfortably. “It’s not something you sip and savour,” Bayliss said. So why do people drink it? Her mother laughed. “Well, the afterwards, the glow!”

Jonny Donovan Russia’s vodka ritual is a time-honoured tradition (Credit: Jonny Donovan)Jonny Donovan
Russia’s vodka ritual is a time-honoured tradition (Credit: Jonny Donovan)

The glow, in fact, is how I first encountered the Russian bread-sniffing ritual. Ward is the mother of my best friend Marsha, and as wayward teenagers, Marsha and I were more than happy to sit in on the gatherings her mother held following her work trips to Russia, the table heaving with exotic booze, salty pickles and black bread. We would watch Ward and her guests laughing, telling tall tales and – crucially – munching on snacks immediately after knocking back shots of vodka. When the guests’ appetite had been amply satisfied – but the toasting continued – they would give the bread a quick sniff after downing their vodka shot, in place of eating it. We were transfixed.

Two decades later I saw the ritual again, this time on primetime television. In an episode of Netflix series House of Cards, the Russian president dines with the US president, and he demonstrates how to drink vodka like a Russian – with sniffs and all. It’s a complicated, theatrical process on the TV show, and not necessarily accurate (“You wouldn’t do that with a posh guest!” Ward exclaimed), but the sharp inhalation is clearly there. Articles were written in response to the episode, suggesting that bread is sniffed to soak up the alcohol and offset the taste of the vodka, while the salt and acid in Russian pickles – like the ones on Ward’s table – help neutralise the alcohol.

Jonny Donovan Helena Bayliss: “Vodka should be cold, glass should be tiny and there must be something salty to follow” (Credit: Jonny Donovan)Jonny Donovan
Helena Bayliss: “Vodka should be cold, glass should be tiny and there must be something salty to follow” (Credit: Jonny Donovan)

But according to Ward and her friends, the ritual is not merely medicinal, it also serves a social function; by eating or sniffing bread after the shot, you’re demonstrating that you’re not just knocking back vodka to get drunk. “If you don’t have something to chase the vodka with, like a piece of salty bread or some herring, or, even better, caviar, then you do the sniffing,” Bayliss said. “It’s symbolic.”

Ward agreed: “The sniffing only happens if you’re too poor to have proper food.” Or, of course, too full. Indeed, if you only had a small amount of bread at a gathering, you’d pass it around the table so that each guest could smell the bread in turn.

And if you don’t have any bread at all? “You sniff your sleeve!”

Accordingly, we took the first shot of the party: Misha made a gracious toast, the ice-cold vodka slipped down smoothly and we followed it with a big bite of black bread and butter. Several drinks later, and quite merry, we each tore off a piece of bread and gave it a good sniff.

Jonny Donovan Some believe that sniffing bread helps to soak up the alcohol and offset the taste of the vodka (Credit: Jonny Donovan)Jonny Donovan
Some believe that sniffing bread helps to soak up the alcohol and offset the taste of the vodka (Credit: Jonny Donovan)

There are firm rules, then, regarding how one drinks vodka in Russia. But equally important is why one drinks vodka. In Russia, it’s a supremely social activity; Russian parties take place around the table, and drinking should be a group activity, never a private pleasure. The zakuski (snacks) are there to be shared, and you must help yourself, not wait to be offered. Ward even shared an apocryphal Russian story about two American spies drinking vodka; their cover was blown by the fact that they were not chomping zakuski as they drank.

Then there’s the act of toasting itself. Misha was animated and emphatic about its significance. “If you drink, you need to say something!” he said. “It’s not like [in England], where everybody sits in his corner. We are together! So there needs to be something for everybody. It helps people to feel that they’re united.”

It helps people to feel that they’re united

In the former Soviet republic of Georgia, toasts are such elaborate affairs that professional toasters may be hired for special functions. Russian toasts, by contrast, are simple – at least, that’s the idea. That day, enthusiastic toasts were made for our meeting together, for the beautiful women at the table and to the health of the Queen. Misha led the toasts and everyone followed with a hearty ‘Poyekhali!’ (‘Let’s go!’), as popularised by the cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin who exclaimed it when his spacecraft took off in 1961.

Clearly, Russians have a deep affection for vodka. Even the name of the drink is endearing – ‘voda’ means water, and ‘vodka’, its diminutive, translates to ‘little water’. But there is a dark side to drinking vodka in Russia, too. Historically, alcoholism has been rife in Russia, and vodka (or whatever you could get your hands on) offered an escape from the harshness of everyday life. “It could be such hell in the Soviet Union,” Ward said.

Jonny Donovan Guests at Russian parties are encouraged to help themselves to zakuski (snacks) between shots of vodka (Credit: Jonny Donovan)Jonny Donovan
Guests at Russian parties are encouraged to help themselves to zakuski (snacks) between shots of vodka (Credit: Jonny Donovan)

Indeed, before Bayliss married an Englishman and Misha and Anna moved to the UK to join her, Misha’s ‘classified’ job meant that he couldn’t leave the country. “We were accustomed to this way of life, but of course it wasn’t normal,” said Misha, of their life in Soviet-era Russia. “We regularly listened to the BBC, Voice of America, and we know there is a different life. But, you’re born in this, so you know you can’t go anywhere.” Anna nodded in agreement. “That was like dreaming of the impossible.”

The Ivanovs recounted stories of privation and party privilege without so much as a shred of drama or self-pity. "You had access to things, or didn’t have access," Anna said. "You need to go and pay for something? You find a party function. You go to the shop and you can’t buy any shoes, but there is a special department for party bosses and KGB bosses." But despite these memories, there was a great warmth to the Russian traditions we shared at the table that day, from the act of toasting to recounting old Russian stories and jokes.

“Somebody brought sardines to dinner,” Ward said, “and when the hostess opened them they were so old that they were no longer edible. And the person who brought them said, ‘I’m so sorry you misunderstood – those weren’t eating sardines, those were gifting sardines!’”

Jonny Donovan According to Russian tradition, if you drink something, you need to say something (Credit: Jonny Donovan)Jonny Donovan
According to Russian tradition, if you drink something, you need to say something (Credit: Jonny Donovan)

It was time for another toast, and Misha had now taken to standing to deliver his words – these ones to absent friends. The vodka was knocked back, chunks of bread were seized and forks were plunged into salty fish. Everyone around the table was pink-cheeked and satisfied. As the afternoon melted into evening, Misha observed, stoically, “Vodka is like a knife. It’s not good, it’s not bad. You can do anything with a knife. Cut meat, cut bread – with a special knife you can make operation. But another knife can kill a person; the knife is not to be blamed.”

He paused. “So, the same with vodka. It’s a drink, it’s not bad, it’s not good. If you know, you know. Everything is okay.”

The Ritual of Eating is a BBC Travel series that explores interesting culinary rituals and food etiquette around the world.

Join more than three million BBC Travel fans by liking us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter and Instagram.

If you liked this story, sign up for the weekly bbc.com features newsletter called "If You Only Read 6 Things This Week". A handpicked selection of stories from BBC Future, Culture, Capital and Travel, delivered to your inbox every Friday.

{"image":{"pid":""}}

Food & DrinkCultural TraditionsWatchThe traditional Turkish pudding with a surprising twist

The traditional Turkish pudding with a surprising twist

Originating in Topkapi Palace where it delighted Ottoman sultans, this delicacy has a surprising ingredient.

Food & DrinkWould you eat a meal dreamed up by a computer?

Would you eat a meal dreamed up by a computer?

AI v The Mind: We explore the world of food and ask if human expertise is the only way to deliver great flavour.

InnovationTurkey's wild and rugged Black Sea region

Turkey's wild and rugged Black Sea region

Food writer Nick Kwek finds out how the wild landscape of Turkey's Black Sea region influences local cuisine.

Food & DrinkThe blunder that changed chickens forever

The blunder that changed chickens forever

How this one simple mistake gave birth to the 50-billion-dollar US chicken industry.

Food & DrinkGetty Images 1058416290

The hunt for the world's most expensive fungus

Reel takes you to Italy to explore how the world's rarest and most expensive ingredient ends up on our tables.

Food & DrinkGetty Images 529677122

What food and drink is good for your memory?

What we eat, it turns out, can have an impact on how well our memory works.

Food & DrinkFrozen fruits rasberries, strawberries, blueberries

How safe is frozen fruit?

A huge recall of frozen fruits is currently happening across the US due to contamination fears.

Food & DrinkThe 200-year-old drinkable champagne

The world's oldest drinkable champagne

How the discovery of the world's oldest drinkable champagne is inspiring new green solutions.

Food & Drink2 APTP6 K

The harmful legacy of poor nutrition

What we eat, or don’t eat, can have a huge impact on us and the generations after us.

Food & DrinkGetty Images 1170698495

The truth behind your favourite flavours

The psychology and biology of flavour preference is some of the most fascinating science out there.

Food & DrinkWagyu beef made in a lab

Japan: Creating the first wagyu beef in a lab

We meet the scientists creating wagyu beaf, a Japanese delicacy with a distinctive texture, from cells.

Food & DrinkGetty Images 544340831

How a vegan diet can affect your brain

Can changing to a vegan diet impact the health of your brain?

Food & DrinkGetty Images 57119295

Spicy chillies: Behind the agonising pleasure of capsaicin

Why humans are one of only two mammals known to tolerate the burn of spicy hot chilli peppers.

Food & DrinkThe fight to feed humanity

The fight to feed humanity

A look at how the world's farmers responding to some of the greatest threats to global food security.

Food & DrinkChocolate

The surprising role chocolate played for ancient humans

We discover why the use of chocolate is older than we think, and the role it played for ancient humans.

Food & DrinkThe surprising power of the beetroot

How beetroot can enhance your performance

In the past decade, new evidence has suggested that nitrates in beetroots can enhance athletic performance.

Food & DrinkGetty Images 535489242

The truth about drinking raw milk

The debate for and against pasteurisation across industries and seas is a passionate one.

Food & DrinkHow Russia fell in love with mayonnaise

The Russian food obsession inspired by the US

What thick, tangy, creamy white sauce links Stalin, French haute cuisine and American mass industrialisation?

Food & DrinkCOD3

Why is cod so popular in Portugal?

From kings to dictators, Portugal’s leaders have always used cod as a political tool.

Food & DrinkGetty Images 85647471

How sushi took over the world

Thinly sliced raw fish on plain white rice. How did this Japanese staple become a global sensation?

Food & DrinkMore from the BBC1 Feb 2026Turin's city skyline with the Mole Antonelliana rising above historic rooftops, with the Alps in the background (Credit: Getty Images)

The Italian city where life is sweetest in winter

From Carnival parades and an annual chocolate festival to vermouth rituals and winter-only dishes, February brings Turin's food culture and traditions into sharp focus.

1 Feb 202616 Jan 2026Person standing on a snowy shoreline overlooking a calm lake at sunrise with snow-covered mountain reflected in water (Credit: Alamy)

Seven wellness traditions to borrow this year

From Indonesia's herbal tonics to Japan's towel rubdowns, these wellness traditions and habits from across the globe can invigorate your new year.

16 Jan 202612 Dec 2025Collage of vintage postcards (Credit: Asia London Palomba)

Can we save travel's most beloved tradition?

Digital communication and social media let us stay in instant touch when we travel, but snail-mailed postcards are still uniting travellers.

12 Dec 20259 Dec 2025Couple taking a selfie in a crowd with Christmas lights behind in Tokyo (Credit: Getty Images)

Christmas traditions that swap gifts for meaning

These seven global traditions show a different side to the season; one that's more communal, more reflective and far less materialistic.

9 Dec 202528 Oct 2025Actor dressed as a ghostly storyteller at Irvington's 'Legend' at Sunnyside in Sleepy Hollow (Credit: Historic Hudson Valley)

The town that renamed itself for Halloween

Two centuries after Washington Irving wrote The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, North Tarrytown has rebranded itself around its most famous ghost – and discovered that the myth still sells.

28 Oct 2025

Tag » Why Do Russians Drink Vodka