The Anonymous Widower

A Pub For Coeliacs?

Yesterday, A pub manager from Islington added a comment to one of my posts.  said he’d got a good selection of gluten free beers in his pub called the Florence in Florence Street, Islington.

I went for a drink yesterday and it would appear he’s going to make very good provision for coeliacs with both food and drink. I just had half of Aspalls.  And very good it was too!

October 25, 2012 Posted by | Food | , , | 1 Comment

Who Ate All The Kedgeree?

This board in the Fox pub on Paul Street by Old Street Tube station tells a tale.

Who Ate All The Kedgeree?

But who ate all the very nice kedgeree?

I did.  And very nice it was too!

October 9, 2012 Posted by | Food | , | 1 Comment

Liverpudlian Humour

They used to say you don’t have to have a sense of humour to live in Liverpool, but it helps.

A Creche For Husbands

Strangely, the pub didn’t seem to be that busy.  But then it was the middle of the afternoon. Or could it be that the average Liverpudlian felt that as they’d spelt crèche wrong, the pub wasn’t very cultured?

September 6, 2012 Posted by | World | , , | 1 Comment

It Was The Scousers That Nicked It!

Congratulations all round to Vauxhall’s Ellesmere Port fsctory for getting the nod to manufacture the new Astra, as reported here.

Duncan Aldred, the chairman of Vauxhall, who had a lot of say in the decision, is not exactly a scouser, as he was born in Bolton, but then Aldred is quite a common surname in Liverpool and one of the Senior Lecturers in Engineering at Liverpool University in the 1960s was another of the clan. So one way or another the man who took the decision was on the payroll of the Scouse Army.

I suspect though, that one drink in the Phil was enough to get the Americans on his side, as who could resist a city and its workforce after seeing some of the best pub toilets in the world.

May 17, 2012 Posted by | Business, World | , , | Leave a comment

The Perils of Alcohol

The Old Queen’s Head in the Essex Road, often chalks up a humorous message.

Notice Outside The Old Queen’s Head

This was yesterday’s philosophy.

May 17, 2012 Posted by | Food | , , , | 5 Comments

What Have the London Marathon and the Multi-User Version of Artemis in Common

According to legend and this web site, the London Marathon was planned by Chris Brasher and John Disley in a pub; the Dysart Arms at Richmond.

So what’s different to most great ideas?

The first multi-user version of Artemis, the project management system, was designed by Richard Nobbs and myself in the Gardeners Arms at Stutton.

April 25, 2012 Posted by | Sport, World | , , , | 1 Comment

This Landlady Had Better Be Careful

This story on the BBC, shows how the United States seems to go out of its way to get everybody’s back up.

It would appear that the pub has been called the Hobbit for about twenty years.

But then, she had better conform, otherwise she’ll be whisked off to the United States to face unlimited fines and a long sentence in some awful jail.

This case is calling out for some good honest British justice.

I used to know one of JRR Tolkein’s cousins and he did a lot of business in the old Soviet Union, where his cousin’s books were very popular. In those , he always took several with him, as they always opened doors.

So I suspect there are quite a few things named after Tolkein characters in Russia.  Why don’t these American lawyers go and annoy Putin?

March 14, 2012 Posted by | News | | Leave a comment

They Don’t Make Pubs Like This Anymore

In Hartlepool station, there is the Rat Race Ale House micropub.

The sign says it all.  Note the barrels and the absence of the bar. As I said before, every station needs one of these.

October 15, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | 3 Comments

An Unusual Pub Name

It’s called the Nobody Inn and it’s just off Newington Green.

The Nobody Inn

What it’s like, I have no idea. But I thought the name was clever.

February 10, 2011 Posted by | World | | 2 Comments

A Dickensian Tavern

As I passed through Clerkenwell, I walked up Britton Street to the north of the famous meat market and had a drink in the Jerusalem Tavern. The tavern is owned by St. Peter’s Brewery and serves their gluten-free ale.

If you’ve seen any period dramas, based on the stories of authors like Charles Dickens, you’ll recognise the style of the pub.  But of course it doesn’t have footpads and low-life of the period and is probably a lot more hygienic.

So any coeliac who likes their beer and visits London, should put this unique drinking establishment on their list of places to visit.

January 22, 2011 Posted by | Food, Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment