One of Russia’s largest restaurant chains has released a dedicated ICO-themed menu for Autumn 2017.

Dve Palochki (‘Two Chopsticks’), which operates primarily in Moscow and St. Petersburg, unveiled the unlikely marketing move last week.

The menu makes reference to a “mulled wine ICO” with drinks priced in “tokens” equal to Russian rubles. There is even an unavailable Chinese mulled wine which the menu describes as “banned.”

“Latin America, China, Japan and Europe have invested their cryptocurrency in ICOs,” a blog post about the release reads.

“But we know what you should invest in this Autumn.”

Despite highly mixed signals from regulators, Russia continues to be a hotbed of ICO activity, with countless startups and ‘projects’ at various levels of completion seeking to capitalize on current market profitability.

Lawmakers have recently repeated intentions to ban cryptocurrency for “unqualified” investors, without giving specific details as to how such a prohibition would work in practice.

With the status of ICO tokens remaining a less contentious gray area, businesses meanwhile consider there to be little to worry about by the way of repercussions.

“We invite you to place your bets on cryptocurrency’s long-term outlook,” the blog post continues.

Earlier this summer, branches of Burger King in Moscow began accepting Bitcoin payments in a limited pilot scheme. In August, the fast food giant launched Whoppercoin, a homegrown digital token based on the Waves platform.