Even though the programme and the arrangements for my recent business trip to Dundee were virtually the same as the one my colleague and I made three years ago, this time around there was a major improvement, and it was all down to the choice and location of the hotel we stayed at. On the previous occasion we followed the organiser’s recommendation of the Double Tree by Hilton Hotel on the edge of the city. This meant we experienced very little of Dundee itself, so this time around, my colleague booked us rooms at the Hampton by Hilton, an excellent hotel, located in the city centre, and just 15 minutes’ walk from Dundee’s riverfront.
We travelled to Dundee to give a presentation to the sales team of our largest UK customer, who are based in the city. This formed part of what our customer termed, their “January Kick-Off Meeting,” and was an all-day event. Lunch and refreshments were provided, and the event was then followed by an evening meal and entertainment at the Invercarse Hotel, overlooking the Firth of Tay. There was a fancy-dress theme for the evening, but more about that later – perhaps!
Following the same pattern as three years ago, we travelled up the day before the meeting, taking an Easy Jet flight from Gatwick to Edinburgh and then collecting a hire car for the 90 minute drive to Dundee. We returned home, the day after the meeting, which meant three days in total, away from the office. I don’t need to go into more details than that, especially as I don’t wish to repeat myself, but if you really want to know more, you can read about that 2020 trip here
On the morning of our departure, I had a couple of hours spare, so I took a stroll down to the Dundee’s waterfront, overlooking the Firth of Tay. As well as wishing to get some exercise I also wanted to take a few photos during daylight hours, of the pub and the restaurant, we’d visited on our first night in the city. There was a strong, and rather cold, westerly wind blowing, and it wasn’t long before I regretted leaving my woolly hat in the hotel room. I carried on, even though a sensible person would have returned to retrieve it, and manged to get some decent shots of Tony Macaroni – the Italian restaurant we dined at, plus a couple of pubs. The first of these was Dynamo, a craft beer bar that is part of the Six Degree North chain. The pub had been recommended by a member of the hotel staff, so it was disappointing to find it closed. It was a Monday evening, so perhaps trade is slack at the start of the working week, but despite it not selling any cask, it does gets a mention on CAMRA’s National Inventory, due to having an interior with some regional importance. Fortunately, the Trades House Bar, at the other end of Union Street, was open and impressed by its stained-glass windows, we stepped inside for a closer look.

Feeling too stuffed for a dessert, we rounded off the meal with an Irish Coffee each – not especially Italian, but a nice way to end the evening. We had an early start ahead of us, the following morning, so we skipped on the idea of a nightcap back at the hotel and retired instead to our respective rooms.
4 comments:
Paul,
I've known "freshly prepared" to mean 'freshly microwaved' but pasta is usually boiled and you probably did as well there as I did with a breakfast ten years ago in an Italian café on Sauchiehall Street.
Stafford Paul, you are right, of course about the microwave, but the choice we made between the standard Greene King offering, and what we experienced at Tony Macaroni was worlds apart - and all for a relatively small difference in price!
It seems CAMRA's AGM in 2019 hasn't exactly boosted cask in Dundee, despite Stafford Paul and my best efforts ! It is a picturesque city though, particularly well captured in your photos.
Martin, I’m sure that had we looked hard enough, we would have found some cask in Dundee. As my colleague is a Stella drinker, there was little incentive for him to walk too far from the hotel, and as a lapsed CAMRA member, I was quite happy to stay close to the hotel, and see what turned up.
The Trades House Bar was excellent, despite having no cask, although I was disappointed to find the interior was all repro, and the building had originally been a bank!
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