Slavutych (Славутич)
Commercial Brewery
in
Zaporizhzhia,
Zaporizhzhia Oblast,
Ukraine 🇺🇦
Owned by
Carlsberg Ukraine
Established in 1974
Contact
Вулиця Василя Стуса, 6, Zaporizhzhia, 69123, Ukraine
Description
The starting point for the history of the Zaporizhzhia plant was the adoption of the Plan of Economic Development for the USSR Republics in the early 1970s. The document was set to solve the problem of the acute shortage of beer in the country. The Plan included the construction of about 22 beer brewing plants with the annual output capacity of 45—60 million liters of beer each. The construction of one of the first brewing plants according to a novel design by Czech engineers, started in 1971, with a record capacity for that time of 72 million liters of beer a year. Czech professionals were supervising the installation and checkout of equipment, as well as trained their Ukrainian colleagues to operate it. On December 12, 1974, the personnel of the Zaporizhzhia Beer Plant No. 2 made their first brew, and the first batch of beer was bottled on January 15, 1975. The new product was gaining popularity at a fast speed.
In 1976, the plant joined the Zaporizhzhia Industrial Association of Beer and Soft Drink Producers, which then was in operation until 1984. In 1986, the history of the plant saw the start of a campaign to fight alcohol addiction. Back in those years, sales quotas were introduced for the product, so this led to a significant drop in production output. For a while, beer had been in short supply. The years of Perestroika were also tough on the plant, with the economic crisis of the late 1980s worsening the matter. Ukraine was suffering from the collapse of the financial and payment systems, as well as from the disruption of economic links with the Soviet republics. However, despite all the challenges, the production was running virtually non-stop.
In 1976, the plant joined the Zaporizhzhia Industrial Association of Beer and Soft Drink Producers, which then was in operation until 1984. In 1986, the history of the plant saw the start of a campaign to fight alcohol addiction. Back in those years, sales quotas were introduced for the product, so this led to a significant drop in production output. For a while, beer had been in short supply. The years of Perestroika were also tough on the plant, with the economic crisis of the late 1980s worsening the matter. Ukraine was suffering from the collapse of the financial and payment systems, as well as from the disruption of economic links with the Soviet republics. However, despite all the challenges, the production was running virtually non-stop.
3/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 3
Flavor 3
Texture 2
Overall 3
Label on this bottle is totally different than this, must be this is the american version of the label. Looks like pale lager. Nice creamy head. Smell is a bit processed and metallic. Taste is a tad rubbery and bitter. Not hop bitter however, just rude bitter. This stuff reminds me of Rinkuškiai style beers. Rude crude and gets the dizzying job done. Strong personality of high gravity beer. Gets down to business. Bitter volatile medicine finish. Will not purchase again.
Tried
from Bottle
on 22 Aug 2010
at 10:40
6.3/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 6
Texture 8
Overall 6
Pretty good pale lager. Pours clear yellow. Nose and taste is slightly fruity, some pines and spice. Rated 6/27/2000
Tried
on 13 May 2010
at 12:39
2.8/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 2
Flavor 3
Texture 4
Overall 2
Can. Pours a golden with a medium white head. Light aroma of bread, grass and some chemical notes. The taste was not better than the aroma. Watery chemical taste with some paper, grass and citrus. Really boring!
Tried
from Can
on 27 Mar 2010
at 01:18
3.9/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 4
Flavor 3
Texture 6
Overall 3.5
Pale yellow with a small hite head. Aroma of grainy malt, straw and a touch of cardboard. Sweet and malty flavour with caramel notes
Tried
on 25 Dec 2009
at 12:28
3/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 3
Flavor 3
Texture 4
Overall 2
Pours with almost no head, piss-yellow colour with some carbonation is emanating from the glass. Smells barely like grains. Oh boy, another boring Ukrainian lager, I’m thinking! Taste is.... uh, taste? Can’t taste anything.... feels a little syrupy, and that’s about it. Incredibly boring. Why bother?
Tried
from Can
on 08 Nov 2009
at 07:47
2.9/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 2
Flavor 3
Texture 4
Overall 2.5
Pours with barely any head, smells like wet farts and alcohol mixed into a non-appealing mess. Taste is mostly grains, some syrup, slight alcohol. Very boring, very below average.
Tried
on 07 Nov 2009
at 10:11
3.8/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 3
Flavor 3
Texture 4
Overall 5
Looks like the cyrillic nations are just discovering ice beer after it’s been declared passé for so many years by western types. Pours a very average looking gold-yellow with almost no head. Smells like slight grains with lots of alcohol. Taste is a barely registerable graininess with alcohol, a slightly fortified taste of grain to it, probably thanks to the "ice" process. But give this one a wide berth.
Tried
on 07 Nov 2009
at 08:40
3.1/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 3
Flavor 3
Texture 4
Overall 2.5
Bottled. Pale yellowish goldenl, not much head. Aroma is harsh grains, wood, grass and quite earthy. Flavour is quite much the same. Quite metallic and rubbeery as well.
Tried
from Bottle
on 08 Aug 2009
at 14:06
2.8/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 2
Flavor 2
Texture 4
Overall 3
Bottled (at Chriso, courtesy of SaintMatty). Pale yellow color, small white head. Skunky corn aroma. Sweet corn malty flavor and skunky grassy hops. Fizzy. Below par East European pale lager.
Tried
from Bottle
on 08 Aug 2009
at 14:03
2.5/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 1
Flavor 2
Texture 4
Overall 2
Yet another 500ml bottle of Ukrainian Svitle, this time bought at a kiosk in Odessa and with bb 25.05.09. Tiny, white lacing-head. Golden body. Very light aroma of sour grass. Some citric sharpness in flavour and little more. Papery and metallic to the palate. Vapid impression (16.07.2009).
Tried
from Bottle
on 28 Jul 2009
at 04:08