A cafe, but I would say a dining room. The prices will surprise you very much, cheap. The staff is pleasant, smiling and helpful.
The food is delicious, but the portions are small.
I stood near the cash register for 7 minutes and no one came out. I voiced to them that someone would serve, zero reaction. Talking in the kitchen is more important.
As fate would have it, I was at the wake for the deceased for 40 days. There is a large hall and a small one. The atmosphere has remained since Soviet times, from the dining room number 2, only differs in repair and the absence of a vending machine that turned on any vinyl record for 5 kopecks. The staff set the memorial table and retired, at least someone came up and asked what anyone needed. I had to come up personally before a smoke break and ask for what I needed. My personal opinion is, make the interior as in Soviet times and put a vending machine with records there, and even a menu from the past, nostalgia would lead many more people there who want to eat or just remember everything. And so they wanted a modern cafe, but now the whole pedestrian Lenin Street is nearby in cafes and snack bars