I haven’t been to a social organised by my local CAMRA
branch for a while now. This isn’t perhaps surprising, as because of the Spa
Valley Railway Beer Festival; the major event in the West Kent CAMRA calendar,
there hasn’t been that many recently.
Saturday though saw half dozen of us taking the No. 234 bus
from Tunbridge Wells and head out into the High Weald area of the county, close
to the border with Sussex.
Our destination was the picturesque village
of Cowden, tucked away in an
idyllic corner of the county. Cowden is home to one of the finest Harvey’s
pubs in the area, in the form of the Fountain; an attractive, part tile-hung
pub situated on a tight bend just down from the village church.
We have done this trip before, and I have posted about the
pub as well, but this time around, the Fountain offered two main attractions
for me on both the beer and the food front. Beer-wise I knew that the
delectable Harvey’s Old Ale would
be on sale, whilst food-wise the Fountain serves some of the best pies around,
and they are proper pies as well!
Shame about the Trip Advisor sign! |
I digress! The 234 bus runs twice daily on Saturdays between
Tunbridge Wells and Edenbridge, taking in the villages of Ashurst, Cowden, Mark Beech and Hever en route. The plan was
to alight in Cowden, stop for lunch at the Fountain, before catching the second
outward service of the day. We would then leave the bus at Mark Beech, where there
would be just enough time for a pint at the Kentish Horse, before catching the
bus back to Tunbridge Wells on its final return journey.
On previous occasions some of us have walked between the two
pubs, but whilst the weather was bright and sunny when I left home, the clouds
were beginning to build by midday,
and as we journeyed towards Cowden we could see the sky growing distinctly
darker away to the south of us, across Ashdown
Forest.
A trio of Harvey's finest |
The assembled company |
Photographs taken, including
some of a troop of riders on horseback, we ascended the steps and entered the
pub. The much anticipated Harvey’s Old was on, alongside Best Bitter and IPA, but I
opted for the former, and was not disappointed. The others had already grabbed
a large table at the far end of the bar, so we went over and joined them. The
Fountain has a good reputation for food, and having eaten there on several
previous occasions I can attest to the quality of its cooking. The barman came
over and took our respective orders, but not before we were joined by another
couple who live locally.
I, of course, opted for “Pie
of the day”, which was chicken, ham and onion – the latter constituent being in
the form of a mild, white onion sauce, which went very well with the large
chunks of meat. It arrived in the form of an individual pie, which met all the
criteria outlined above, to qualify as “proper”. With a few new potatoes, and
seasonal vegetables, it really was a dish fit for a king. It was also rather
filling. Washed down with a few pints of dark and silky-smooth Harvey’s Old, it
couldn’t have been bettered, and the food, drink, good company and fine
surroundings of this lovely old village inn made the perfect combination of all
that is good about the part of the country we live in. There can surely be few
finer ways to spend a Saturday afternoon, in England during mid November, than this.
The former Crown Inn - Cowden |
The bus dropped us off in
Mark Beech, right opposite the Kentish Horse, but we had trouble squeezing
inside as the pub was absolutely heaving. I have never seen it so busy, but we
discovered that several groups of walkers, caught out by the ferocity of the
weather, had decided to take shelter in the pub. The small, games area at the
far end, was showing the England v Fiji rugby game, so that too had pulled in the crowds.
Kentish Horse - alternative Christmas |
The return bus to Tunbridge
Wells arrived more or less on time and we were glad to get out of the cold and
the damp. Several of our party nodded off on the journey back, including me briefly,
but once back in the town we all decided that a few final drinks in Fuggles
would be a good way to finish the day.
Fuggles too was heaving, but
we managed to find a small table towards the rear and sufficient chairs for us
all to squeeze round. Downland - Hop Contract and One Mile End –Hospital Porter
were the cask beers I tried, before finishing up with a half of the excellent
Beavertown - Smog Rocket Porter on key-keg.
Various people came and went,
and some drifted off – incredibly for another meal! My friend and I departed
some time around half seven and made our way to the station, through the
pouring rain, and the train back to Tonbridge.
Like with all these trips, it
is worth taking advantage of public transport, and journeying out into the surrounding
countryside. It is especially important to make use of local bus services and
give them all the support we can, particularly when local authority spending is
being reined in, and cash is tight generally. It is also good, of course, to be
supporting our rural pubs in the best way possible - by drinking in them!
2 comments:
Some lovely pictures there Paul; I really must get to Cowden Pound area again. Those pies look particularly tempting !
Proper pies as well Martin, and with Harvey’s Old on tap as well, country pubs don’t come much better than this.
There’s good walking country in this isolated bottom corner of Kent and some good, unspoilt rural pubs too.
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