Posts by Glynn Davis
When smaller is better
Wandering around the smart Belgravia area of London on Father’s Day involved passing some of my favourite pubs including the Fox & Hounds, Nag’s Head and The Grenadier, which I have frequented over many years. One common theme among them is that they are all pretty small, and their cosiness is an attractive characteristic that…
Read MoreCalling time on phones
Recent train journeys to and from Brighton, a morning coffee in Pret A Manger, a spell in the waiting room at my dentist’s and an early evening pint in my local pub all had one thing in common. It was the annoying use of mobile phones for conversations on speakerphone or people viewing videos at…
Read MoreBook Review – ‘Drink Maps in Victorian Britain’
Over the years I’ve created a number of what you could call ‘drink maps’ and they have provided me with the basis for some great pub crawls. But the history of the original drink maps shows that they were designed to reduce rather than promote the consumption of alcohol. In the newly-published book ‘Drink Maps…
Read MoreIn line for success
Venturing down a quiet side street in Hackney, East London, will lead you to a typical Victorianpub. Although it is an extremely attractive example of the genre there is something rather unusualabout this backstreet boozer. You can catch the rather unique characteristics of the Chesham Arms in E9 on a Friday andSaturday evening when there…
Read MoreThe Kernel sails on almost serenely
He’s very modest so he’d almost be embarrassed if you suggested he possibly runs the UK’s best brewery in the country. Reality is, this might just be the case on certain measures. My own measurement is whether a brewery releases any duff beers and on my personal calculations The Kernel Brewery does not produce duff…
Read MoreBook Review: ‘Good Honest Tales – 150 years of Batemans Brewery’
Many years ago when my family took me on day trips to Skegness we would sometimes briefly stop on the return journey at a pub that I can recall had Batmans written on its sign. As a youngster this was rather spooky. Only years later did I realise that it had been Batemans that I’d…
Read MoreBeer Travels with Adrian Tierney-Jones
Late Monday morning, and after a walk through the washed out January streets of the Vinohrady district of Prague, past patches of dirty snow and skeletal droppings of ice, it’s early doors at the Vinohradský Pivovar restaurant. Tables are already occupied with diners, including one where a chef in whites looks like he’s studying the…
Read MoreBrewDog’s change in strategy could mean last orders for craft beer drinkers
We’ve not got far into January, and yet we’ve seen even more seismic activity in a craft beer world that was already proving a particularly active category as 2023 came to a conclusion. Amid a disappointing number of failures in the sector came the shocking news that North Brewing Co had gone into administration (and…
Read MoreIn search of the craic
Seated at the expansive bar counter of the new Irish Exit bar in Moynihan Train Hall in mid-town Manhattan in New York City, early evening was a joyous experience in what is undoubtedly one of the best station bars or pubs I’ve encountered during my travels. With around 250 covers, it is a pretty extensive…
Read MoreThe Breal Deal
Many years ago my parents lived next door to a successful businessman who I befriended – Swiss-born Mario Halbeisen (RIP) who set up Marcrist Industries and who was for a period the sole importer of diamond drill bits into the UK. He made a bit of a killing and like many people with money burning…
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