The Beer Seller - the
latest addition to Tonbridge’s burgeoning pub scene, has been open now for just under three months, but with just the one visit under my belt, I thought it high
time to pop my head round the door and pop in to see what’s on offer.
I needed to buy some new shirts for my fast approaching
business trip to Cologne, and after
persuading Mrs PBT’s that we could leave the weekly food shop until the
following day, headed over to Tunbridge Wells, on the train.
Travelling by rail is definitely the best option
particularly on a Saturday, as not only does the town get snarled up with
traffic, but parking the car is both difficult and expensive. So with a return
fare costing juts £2.90, thanks to my “Senior Railcard”, I caught the 10.29am service over to the Wells, and 10
minutes later was walking up the hill to the town’s main shopping centre.
M&S was my destination, as I find their shirts both
comfortable and long-wearing, but with the need to look the part whilst on the
company’s stand at the International Dental Show (IDS), it was high time I
treated myself to some new ones. IDS takes place every two years, and looking
back I recall doing exactly the same thing back in 2017!
It didn’t take me long to select five suitable shirts, make my purchases and leave the store, calling in at a couple of charity shops on
the way back to the station. With many music lovers switching to digital
downloads, I find these outlets an increasingly good source of CD’s, at bargain
prices. Some of us still prefer to have a physical item, rather than an
electronic “virtual” one.
I struck gold, not with a CD, but with a 4-disc, special
extended box set DVD of the "Two Towers"; the second Lord of the Rings film.
Nicely packaged in a fold-out box, and priced at just one Pound, this had to be
the best bargain of the year so far.
My return train saw me arrive back in Tonbridge at 12.20pm, with a visit to the Beer Seller
firmly on my mind. I had heard via one of our West Kent CAMRA “WhatsApp”
groups, that Goacher’s Old Ale would be on sale, so after striking lucky the
previous weekend with Harvey’s Old,
a small glass of Goacher’s finest would be just what I was after following my
shopping expedition.
I headed off along the High Street, and that was where what
I’d intended as just a quick drink, turned into a much longer one. A dozen or
so yards from the Beer Seller I bumped into my old friend, and walking partner,
Eric. I hadn’t seen him since before Christmas, and the irony was that
particular meeting had also taken place in said drinking establishment.
It was rather inevitable then that we should adjourn to the
Beer Seller, for that mythical “quick pint”. Of course there’s no such thing,
despite the best of intentions, so after noticing that whilst Goacher’s Old was
indeed on sale, its high octane (6.7%
ABV) persuaded me that something a little weaker would be much more suited for
lunch-time drinking.
So spying Kent Brewery Porter at a mere 5.5% ABV, I settled
for this more moderate dark ale. Eric did likewise, and we stood at the bar,
enjoying a bit of banter with Wendy the barmaid and a chap sinking at the bar.
Eric knew both these persons, and we were soon chatting merrily away.
The porter was very good, smooth, dark and full of lots of
roast flavours. I scored it at 4.0 NBSS, but I knew full well that when two
Englishmen “go for a pint”, there’s always more than one beer involved.
Throwing caution to the wind, we both decided to risk the Goacher’s Old, but
half-pints only!
The halves were dispensed into our empty pint glasses, which
meant they were on the generous side. This was one time when I would have
preferred an exact measure, but when I tasted the beer it was definitely
something special. Like several other smooth, “old” beers of this nature, it
didn’t drink to its strength, although it was very full-bodied.
It would have been very easy to have sunk another half,
which is exactly what we ended up doing, because although I had every intention
of calling it a day, Eric ordered us another half each whilst I was in the
gents.
A short digression here, as I know there are quite a few
fans of “toilet art” out there, and I wanted to share some of the magazine and
newspaper clippings pasted on the wall above the urinals. Not as good as some,
but for those of us who grew up in the late 1960’s-early 1970’s, a touch of
pure nostalgia. (For something more up to date, check out the mural below,
which is from the gents toilets at the Wuppertaler Brauhaus, -a former swimming
baths in the conurbation of Wuppertal, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.)
I obviously finished my “unwanted” half of Old, but we
definitely decided to call it a day at that point. Whilst not packed, the Beer
Seller was doing a reasonable trade for early on Saturday; a time when many
people would still be out shopping.
With a good selection of gravity-drawn beers on tap, and all
priced at just £3.60 a pint, along with a selection of snacks from the butcher
and fishmonger just down the road, you can’t really go wrong. Incidentally, the
lagers are also local (Curious Brew and Westerham), and a very reasonable £4.00 a pint.
Mrs PBT’s wasn’t entirely surprised when I breezed in, with
that slight look of silliness about me. She’d guessed I’d bumped into someone
and also surmised I’d been to a place where drink was sold. Son Matthew had
taken her shopping, so all was right with
the world, but the Beer Seller, strong beer and an old friend I hadn’t
seen in ages were probably not the best of combinations.
2 comments:
Paul, it's a great addition to the Tonbridge drinking scene. I love the varied mix of local (and very well kept) beers
Agreed Evan, and a far better bet than Spoon's. What's more the majority of the beers are sourced locally; as are the bar snacks.
Post a Comment