A small brewery in Finland has launched a Nato-themed beer to mark the Nordic country’s bid to join the western military alliance.
Olaf Brewing’s Otan lager features a blue label with a cartoon version of a beer-drinking medieval knight in metal armour emblazoned with Nato’s compass symbol.
The beer’s name is a play on the Finnish expression “Otan olutta”, which means “I’ll have a beer”, and the French abbreviation for Nato, which is Otan.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation has two official languages, English and French.
Chief executive Petteri Vanttinen told the Associated Press that the craft brewery’s ad hoc decision last weekend to start producing the beer was motivated by “worries over the war in Ukraine” and its consequences for Finland.
He described the new lager as having “a taste of security, with a hint of freedom”.
Finland and Sweden on Wednesday submitted an application to join Nato at the alliance’s headquarters in Brussels.
Olaf Brewing said its new beer also honours the eastern Finnish town of Savonlinna, the brewery’s base located a few dozen kilometres from Finland’s border with Russia.
Savonlinna is known for St Olaf’s Castle, a medieval structure from 1475 that serves as a venue for an annual international opera festival.
“Our small hometown Savonlinna has always lied in the borderlands between East and West. Many battles have been fought in the town area and at St. Olafs Castle,” the brewery said in a Twitter post.
Finland shares a 1,340-kilometre (830-mile) border with Russia, the longest of any European Union member.
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