After leaving the Brighton Bierhaus we set off in search of
something to eat. The pub only served pizza, and that had to be delivered in
and as I, at least, wanted fish and chips, we took a walk down to the seafront.
I had noticed several fried fish shops as we walked along
the front earlier, but as is often the way of things, they all seemed to have
disappeared when we actually wanted to find one to eat at. We crossed the road and took a look at the beach and the
pier. Both looked their summer best in the bright, early June sunshine, but
despite this there was still no sign of a place to eat.
After crossing back and diving briefly into the Lanes again,
we struck lucky, with a fish and chip shop on the corner. The only problem was
by now, son Matthew had decided he’d rather have a burger, than that most
traditional of seaside dishes, cod and chips.
Cursing the fickleness of youth under my breath, we walked a
little further, and found a restaurant with tables set out in front, but
protected from the off-shore sea breezes, by a glass screen. Matthew wasn’t
sure, I don’t quite know why, seeing as I was paying, but we nevertheless found a convenient
table tucked away in the corner.
Looking back, number one son had allowed his blood sugar
levels to drop. Rather typically he had skipped breakfast, and apart from a bag
of crisps eaten on the train, had not had anything to eat. Combine that with
two pints of a 5% beer, and it’s small wonder he was grumpy, but he demolished the
house-burger and chips with aplomb. I'm not sure whether washing his meal down with a pint of
Stella, helped or not, but his mood did seem to improve.
My selection was more reserved; haddock and chips with a pot
of tea. This was far more in keeping with the seaside setting. Buddies proved a
good place to stop off at, and other visitors to the town obviously thought the
same.
There was a party of four blokes from Switzerland,
sitting just along from us. They had obviously just got off the plane, judging
by their suitcases complete with the IATA airport code labels, but were getting stuck into their
fish and chips, as did the group from “souf” London who arrived shortly
afterwards.
The afternoon was getting on, and we still had another pub
to visit. The Brighton Beer Dispensary is situated just off Western
Road, which is Brighton’s
main shopping thoroughfare. We made our way along to this busy part of the town,
skirting round the Churchill Square
shopping centre.
Matthew works in retail, for a well-known hardware chain of
stores, and wanted to check in on the firm’s Brighton
branch. Talk about a busman’s holiday, but I went along with him, just to be
nosey. A stock audit was taking place, as Matthew recognised one of the
auditors, but with curiosity satisfied, we made our way to the Brighton Beer Dispensary.
The pub is located roughly two thirds of the way up a steep
side-street, in the middle of a row of terraced houses.. Formerly known as the
Prince Arthur, the Brighton Beer Dispensary
is a joint venture between Brighton Bier and the Southey Brewing Company,
who are based in South London outfit. The main bar, with
its exposed brickwork, is at the front of the pub, whilst at the rear is a
small conservatory area with seating.
It was there that we sat after selecting and purchasing our drinks.
I hadn’t come across Southey Brewing before, but given the proliferation of new
breweries in recent years, this is hardly surprising. I opted for the 3.8% Southey
Pale, which was refreshing and quite drinkable. Matthew’s choice of the keg
Pilsner looked rather strange, as it was hazy, bordering on murky (London
murky?). He said it tasted alright, but when I tried it, it was
unsurprisingly very yeasty.
It was pleasant sitting out in the conservatory, but I had
one eye on the time. We wanted to take the Eastbourne
route home, so after noting there was a train departing at 6pm, we made our way back to the station. The train was busy
with homeward bound commuters, and students, although most of the latter group
alighted at Falmer, adjacent to Sussex
University and, for the football
fans out there, the Amex Stadium.
The majority of the commuters got off either at Lewes or Eastbourne,
and we then had most of the carriage to ourselves. North of Eastbourne the line
hugs the coast, as it passes through Pevensey and Norman’s
Bay. We left the train at St Leonard’s
Warrior Square, and after swapping
platforms, waited for train up from Hastings,
which would take us back to Tonbridge.
It had been a good
day out, and for me it was especially
good to re-visit Brighton after all those years. We barely scratched the surface, beer-wise, so a further visit would be a good idea. Using my Senior Railcard, the return rail fare was a very reasonable £10.90. It is two and half times that amount, should you choose to travel via London, but then, why would you?
Brighton has much to offer besides good beer and good pubs, with a real sense of joie de vie to accompany its free spirit, and general quirkiness. It's therefore, not surprising that the town, very sensibly, voted Remain, by a large margin, in that divisive and totally unnecessary, “advisory”referendum.
Brighton has much to offer besides good beer and good pubs, with a real sense of joie de vie to accompany its free spirit, and general quirkiness. It's therefore, not surprising that the town, very sensibly, voted Remain, by a large margin, in that divisive and totally unnecessary, “advisory”referendum.
15 comments:
Hi Paul, as an update on this apparent loss of your blog history, if I go to another beer blogger's site, e.g. Boak and Bailey, then the link that they show to you also just gives me your latest post.
Hope it's easily rectified.
Cheers,
E
Hi E, most bloggers sites are set up like that. For example, I've just been over at Mudgie's place, and his blog list only shows the latest post from each of the sites listed.
My site is the same. You have to physically click on whichever site takes your fancy, to get the full history, and even then it will only show a certain number of posts. As far as I recall, mine is set to show the seven most recent of my posts.
If each individual site showed more of the history of each of the other linked sites, there wouldn't be room for anything else, so I'm a little confused here as to whether there's an actual problem or not.
Previously, when I clicked on another site's link to yours, I usually - not always - got the page that you describe, with the seven most recent posts, and, as I recall, with an option to see archive or earlier posts. I used to get the same if I clicked on your page heading, the blog's general title.
As you say, to see comments etc. it was necessary to click on the particular post's heading.
Now, I simply get your single latest post. There is no access to any form of archive on that. Clicking on the general heading is of no avail either. If I search, Google or whatever throws up the same.
I hope this helps.
E
Interesting - I'm getting the cross in the address window of my browser, which means that the page has not completed loading.
After a *long* time, on one occasion, the whole page did appear with all the sidebar information etc., but that has not been repeatable as yet
This is the url that I'm using https://baileysbeerblog.blogspot.com
.
Paul, it seems to take about five minutes before I get the cookie consent notice, and after I check that I see the normal page.
My connection speed is OK, however, but maybe it's a certificates issue?
I doubt if it's a website content problem however, so by all means delete these comments. I'd be interested in whether anyone else finds this though.
Cheers,
E
Wonderful post, marvellous pictures and a great story.
Congrats for your blog.
E, to say I’m confused would be an understatement, but worse still I don’t know how to fix this issue; assuming there is an issue.
Google assume everyone is a computing genius, whereas in reality most people aren’t. They don’t make changing things easy at all, and they certainly don't use everyday language.
I would be interested to know if anyone else is experiencing problems accessing my site. Thanks.
I've done some searching and people have this issue with some sites on some browsers. I'm using Safari on a Mac. Explanations range from having a virus to problem page content, so I'm left where I started.
Other blogspot.com threads seem OK though.
Yes, it would be good to know if it's general or just a few such as me.
It's a long shot maybe, but the "beer books" ad near the top left never does load for me. Just appears as a question mark. The link works if you click in the box, mind.
My posts never get to you so no reason to expect this one will.
More of an experiment really.
This post has though, Greengrass!
I have not had issues with the site.
Works for me, too.
Really interesting post.
Albeit with far too many chips for me to cope with 😉
The site works normally on my smart phone. It's just on the Mac where ages take a minute or two to load.
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