You don’t know how lucky you are! To have a pot from the USSR!
BuffRedditor on
This deserves more upvotes
HalfOrcMonk on
Written in English.
wawaboy on
Pic verified
melankoholisti on
It’s just United States Skillet Refinery
everydayasl on
What did your mom make that you liked best? Miss my grandmother who made killer stuffed cabbages.
SpecialMango3384 on
Obviously the pinnacle of Soviet craftsmanship
y18a2vzz on
Must be one of those Five Year Pans.
headline-pottery on
Looks sturdy. Certainly outlived the USSR will probably outlive Mom and you I hope you have kids to pass it down to. “In Russia – pot cooks you!”
Salmagros on
Did you used Geiger counter to check it yet?
greensandgrains on
That thing will outlive all of us (and I’m jealous, that’s so cool).
Fan-Hun-BC on
Sorry but for some reason, I read “USSR” as “UBER”! I was like, this has to be a longest Uber ride in the history of mankind!
destruction_potato on
My plates that used to be my grandparents’ were made in Czechoslovakia. They were my grandparents’ wedding gift from family, they were barely getting used so when I moved out on my own I appropriated them. Same thing with my cutlery, only they were my great grandparents’ wedding gift cutlery that had been sitting in a cupboard, not being used, literally all my life. Now it all mine.
13 Comments
You don’t know how lucky you are! To have a pot from the USSR!
This deserves more upvotes
Written in English.
Pic verified
It’s just United States Skillet Refinery
What did your mom make that you liked best? Miss my grandmother who made killer stuffed cabbages.
Obviously the pinnacle of Soviet craftsmanship
Must be one of those Five Year Pans.
Looks sturdy. Certainly outlived the USSR will probably outlive Mom and you I hope you have kids to pass it down to. “In Russia – pot cooks you!”
Did you used Geiger counter to check it yet?
That thing will outlive all of us (and I’m jealous, that’s so cool).
Sorry but for some reason, I read “USSR” as “UBER”! I was like, this has to be a longest Uber ride in the history of mankind!
My plates that used to be my grandparents’ were made in Czechoslovakia. They were my grandparents’ wedding gift from family, they were barely getting used so when I moved out on my own I appropriated them. Same thing with my cutlery, only they were my great grandparents’ wedding gift cutlery that had been sitting in a cupboard, not being used, literally all my life. Now it all mine.