A possible concise summary is:
The video is a review of a historical replica of a German dry ration from the time of World War II. The reviewer shows and tastes various items from the ration, such as stew, freeze-dried soup, biscuits, candy, chocolate, coffee and cigarettes. He compares them to modern or Soviet equivalents and gives his opinions on their quality and taste. He also thanks the historical club that provided him with the ration and asks his viewers to comment and subscribe.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
1. The narrator received a package containing a historically recreated dry ration of the Wehrmacht army.
2. The package included a letter from the Kaliningrad Historical Club, which sent the ration.
3. The ration consisted of three packages of coffee, a tin can, and a small cardboard box with various food items.
4. Each German soldier was entitled to two hot meals and one cold meal per day from the field kitchen.
5. If hot meals couldn't be supplied for 24 hours or more, soldiers were given an "iron spider" ration.
6. The "iron spider" ration came in two types: full and half.
7. The narrator reviewed the half "iron spider" ration, which included a dinner dish, cans of stewed meat, and biscuits.
8. The biscuits were packaged in oil-soaked paper and weighed 125 grams per package.
9. The ration also included a jar of stew, a package of freeze-dried pea soup, and a small cardboard box with additional food items.
10. The cardboard box contained Leningrad cookies, lollipops, a hematogen-like substance, fruit marmalade, and chocolate.
11. The narrator tried the stew, pea soup, and coffee, and found them to be of varying quality.
12. The coffee was found to be too strong and lacking in sugar.
13. The narrator expressed gratitude to the Kaliningrad Historical Club for providing the dry ration.
14. The narrator found the freeze-dried pea soup to be particularly tasty.
15. The ration included cigarettes with filters, which the narrator's operator found to be similar to Soviet cigarettes.