The Dovecote - 25 years in the GBG |
Last month I posted an article about the five pubs which
have appeared in every edition of CAMRA’s best-selling Good Beer Guide. That’s
45 editions and 45 years continuous entry.
Now that takes some doing, and is one hell of an
achievement, but here in West Kent we have a few longstanding entries of our
own, and earlier in the week, the local branch awarded certificates to two of
them. I was amongst those present when the awards were handed over, and here is
my report.
First up, and celebrating 20 consecutive years in the Guide,
was the Dovecote at Capel. Now Capel is little more than a row of houses, the
odd farm plus a 13th Century church, close to the village of Five
Oak Green, three miles to the east of Tonbridge. The Dovecote forms part of the
aforementioned row of houses and, whilst little is know about its history, is a
fine country pub.
With very few chimney pots in the immediate vicinity, the
Dovecote has to offer something special to attract custom, and it does this by
stocking a range of up to six cask ales, alongside what it describes as “good
traditional, locally-sourced homely food, in a cosy atmosphere”.
I have known the pub for the past 30 years, and little has
changed apart from the installation of an ingenious system for serving
cask-beer by gravity. This was devised by a former landlord, and it involves
the casks being kept in a temperature-controlled room, immediately behind the
bar. Extra-long cask taps protrude through the dividing wall, and out through
false barrel ends, made out of wood, set into the wall. The result, beer kept
at just the right temperature, and served in the most natural way possible –
straight from the cask.
Harvey’s Sussex
Best and Gales HSB (now brewed by Fuller’s, of course), are the two regular
beers, alongside something from Tonbridge Brewery. When we called in on Tuesday
evening, Old Dairy Copper Top and Fuller’s Oliver’s Island
were also on sale. I opted for the latter, and can report it was in excellent
condition (3.5 NBSS). This was my first taste of this beer on cask; although I
am pretty certain I have tried it in bottled-form.
For those of us still working, (not many amongst a branch of
mainly retirees), it was rather a rush getting to the Dovecote for the 7pm presentation, but a non-working friend,
very kindly gave me a lift. We joined half dozen or so other members who’d
arrived ahead of us, also by car.
Charlie, the landlord had been tipped off about our visit,
but I think that even he was unsure that the pub had clocked up that many years
in the guide. The bar was still fairly quiet, so branch chairman Craig, went
ahead with the presentation, along with the usual congratulatory speech.
Charlie was thrilled with the award, and thanked us for coming. We would have
liked to have stayed longer, but we had another presentation to make that
evening; this time to a back-street local in Tunbridge Wells.
We set off, in two cars, and made our way to Mount Sion; a short distance up from the town’s High Street.
This is an area of narrow and in places part cobbled streets, with a mix of
substantial early Victorian houses and charming, cosy cottages, which is often
referred to as the “Village” area of Tunbridge Wells. Despite the
obvious parking problems, it is a very desirable, but rather expensive, part of the town in which to live.
We made our way to the Grove Tavern, in Little Mount Sion; a tiny and cosy “L”-shaped pub which is a
contender for the title of the oldest pub in Tunbridge Wells. The Grove is a
drinkers and a sports enthusiast’s pub, which attracts its own loyal crowd of regulars, but with
an open fire in winter, and some lively conversation at the bar, visitors are
soon made to feel at home here.
Grove Tavern - 15 years in the GBG |
The pub is ably run by landlord
Steve Baxter, with help from wife Jane and sometimes their daughter as well.
The Grove is celebrating its 15th year in the Good Beer Guide, and
once again it fell to chairman Craig to make the presentation. There was a much
larger CAMRA contingent present, than there had been at the Dovecote; unsurprisingly
really given the pub’s central location. There was also a good crowd of
regulars in the bar as well.
The Grove stocks Harvey’s
Sussex Best and Taylor’s Landlord as its regular beers, with a
couple of guest ales normally on sale alongside. On Tuesday these were Templar,
from Pilgrim Brewery, plus a 4.2% Green Hop Ale from Wantsum Brewery. I made the
mistake of choosing the latter, which was foolish, given that I have never been
a fan of Wantsum beers.
My instincts were correct, and the beer had a peculiar “woody”
taste which at first I put down to the green hops, before recognising this undesirable, off-tasting
characteristic. I wasn’t the only person who was unimpressed with this
beer, but the excellent pint of Landlord I had after, made up for it.
As mentioned it was a good turn-out and Steve was obviously
pleased with his well-deserved award. I didn’t stay too much longer, as I took
advantage of my friend’s offer of a lift back to Tonbridge. It was a “school-night”
after all, so I was quite pleased to be home, shortly before 10.30 pm.
It had been an enjoyable evening though, and it was particularly
good to see two quite diverse pubs, which are almost polar opposites, doing so
well.
4 comments:
From the inconvenient flights to having to sort out the men's wages I'd say it was a serendipitous concatenation of events. :)
Congrats on being a virgin no more! (Oktoberfest-wise of course).
Cheers
More details of the event itself, and our experiences there, to follow.
Apologies Paul, my post was meant for your Oktoberfest post (blush).
Between your bike post just prior to this one, and the fact this post highlights two contrasting pubs, it seems the area where you live is quite good in the sense of an embarrassment of riches in deciding where to go for a pint. :)
Cheers
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