Friday 29 August 2008

Middle class hikers and small vases of cut flowers in the Rolle Quay Inn


It is good, of course, that fewer fathers are absent alcoholics these days, but the result of fewer pounds spent on ale in local pubs is that landlords are forced to look elsewhere for profits.



Offering food and enticing in women has saved some pubs from ruin. But these changes have also ruined pubs. Barnstaple's Rolle Quay Inn is not at all ruined but it has a minor deterrent: small vases of cut flowers.



I have nothing against small vases of cut flowers, as long as they are kept in their natural home: tea rooms where neat old ladies put china cups on lace doilies.



When I visited the Rolle Quay, it was 7.30pm on a gloomy, but dry, Thursday night at the height of the inglorious summer of 2008. I identified the regulars, because regulars tend to mark their territory like many other mammals. Rather than spraying urine about the place, I assumed, the regulars had opted for the usual pub voodoo of sitting in a line along the bar, where they could talk to the staff and prevent everyone else from enjoying easy access to the beer. This is an old pub game and it should not be attacked, because it forces strangers to talk to regulars and gives regulars a much-needed sense of power.



The rest of the pub, which easily passed the Adam's Ale "window test" (wooden windows good, plastic windows bad) was empty, apart from the furniture: chairs, tables, carpet, framed photographs of local scenes (when men were men and pubs were pubs and small vases of cut flowers were only ever seen in church) oh, and small vases of cut flowers. These days, pubs in Barnstaple are seldom busy on week nights, so the lack of custom was unsurprising. I was, however, dismayed to see small vases of cut flowers on each table.



The Rolle Quay is a St Austell's brewery pub and my pint was made by that Cornish firm. St Austell's beers are refreshing and decent. My pint was clearly from a well-kept cellar.



I had a choice of too many tables with too many little vases of cut flowers, so my eyes darted around like a man lost in a carpark, but I chose a seat next to a window so I could look at an abandoned stone warehouse, the steely sky and the ugly block of mundane new flats (with plastic windows) on the quay. Did prospective custom lurk in that brick and white plastic factory of dreams? To misquote Morrissey, planning regulations have so much to answer for.



I had a newspaper, but did not get the chance to read the tales of murder and rape in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere. Ten seconds after I sat down, a couple of middle-aged middle-class hikers sat at the table next to me.




I get an almost-religious joy from walking in the North Devon countryside (I LOVE IT BEYOND REASON!)but I have never felt the need to do so wearing khaki shorts. Other people are less considerate.



And it would be easy to reduce to silly caricature the hikers who joined me in the Rolle Quay Inn that evening. So I will. They were aged in their late-50s, he with big grey beard, she with big grey legs. They wore shorts and waterproof rucksacks. I might have hallucinated this, but I think sandals were in evidence. They had the energetic fizz of retired teachers, freed at last from the punishing whims of England's perpetually disobedient, endlessly disappointing, children. If you wanted to button down the cliche once and for all, you would say they were Guardian readers.



I was, unusually, in no mood for eavesdropping, but it was hard to resist their conversation, littered as it was with commuter belt pellets of pomposity and such delights as: "It's always SO much better to come to these backstreet sort of places". Indeed.




No doubt reassured by the wooden window frames and small vases of cut flowers, this pair of woolly explorers were in for a shock when the landlord appeared.



He was a wiry little man of middle-aged years with long, lank, hair and the general air of a hard rocker who spent the 1970s carrying amplifiers and cider for Motorhead. I am sure he is a first-class landlord (the beer is certainly well-kept) but the hikers exchanged glances which said: "I suppose they let him take the orders in exchange for a bag of crisps." It was only when they asked him to thank "the landlord" for their food, and he said "that's me", did they bristle with shocking embarrassment and perhaps even a measure of regret, or even indigestion.




Fifteen minutes earlier, the couple had decided what they wanted to eat from the menu of solid pub food favourites (fish and chips, pie, curry) and had chosen to have starters as well as main courses. I bet they live in a converted grain store.




So they went on, exchanging condescending views about Barnstaple and the pub as if they were the cleverest human beings in all the Queen's land, and there was some private family mini-crisis I couldn't follow, no matter how hard I tried. No other customers arrived, but the pub has a lively darts scene and is (a bit) busier at weekends, I later discovered.



I drank my pint of Cornish ale quicker than I would normally have done, and rolled my unread copy of the Guardian under my arm, like a proper regular, almost. I half feared the hikers might try and speak to me as I got up to leave, still steady on my Brasher boots; we were so near each other.



But they didn't, and I left as the landlord turned on a stereo and allowed a Thin Lizzy song to escape at refreshing volume.



THE ROLLE QUAY INN, ROLLES QUAY, BARNSTAPLE

ADAM'S ALE RATING: 3 OUT OF 5

DRINK THIS BEER: ANY ST AUSTELL ALE, OR HAVE A PUNT ON THE GUEST BEER





Friday 22 August 2008

INTERLUDE: Where armchairs are used as dining chairs, and where no grace or rhythm interrupts the baleful mediocrity

If you are a cross-eyed lightbrain cretin with a gold medal in mediocrity, you will love Mambo in Taunton.

If your head wobbles because your skull is crammed with blancmange rather than human brain, you will love Mambo in Taunton.

If you greedily swallow every line of lies ever dispensed by marketing chimps, you will love Mambo in Taunton.

If you worship at the altar of fashion, you will kneel with love under the bamboo parasols at Mambo in Taunton.

If you have intelligence and judgement the way wolves have mathematics and poetry, you will love Mambo in Taunton.

If you think Jeremy Clarkson improves things in general, you will love Mambo in Taunton.

If you think Foster's is good beer, you will love Mambo in Taunton.

If you are a quiffy great honk-faced mummy's boy with a belligerent manner and a stenchful sense of entitlement, you will love Mambo in Taunton.

If you think Tesco lasagne is better than sex, you will love Mambo in Taunton.

Indeed.

And a final thought:

When the guttersnipe poison pigeons look even more suicidal than usual and the natural exuberance of human optimism flails gnarled and angry and selfish, you know Summer 2008 has fallen like an itchy grey cloak about your ears, and you know you are in a McPub in Taunton.

Sunday 17 August 2008

Indecorous eccentrics and eccentric decor (an unexpected encounter in a fine public house)


One cooling summer dusk I found myself, energised by a sweet spicy dinner and a few kitchen ales, bundling into the Reform Inn, where yeasty pot-wallopers were stood on wooden chairs, screaming to the ends of their lungs through tobacco smoke.



It was almost 11pm and I wanted to look around my new "local". On that distant evening three years ago, I was unprepared.



An emotional and physical weakling would have fled, I told myself, so I shuffled through the blur to the bar, where I was greeted by a silver-haired gentleman bristling with a stripe of friendliness more usually reserved for the leprous thief. Yes, I was a thirsty stranger too close to closing time, who had neither the elbows for pool nor the eyebrows for darts...you know those special targeted brows...



But no matter. I got my pint of Barum Original above the yowling and through the haze I tried to analyse my amazing environment. Everything seemed somehow too luminous, too...yellow...orange...but worn in. This was unlike any public house I had ever visited.



I registered the pleasingly eccentric decor and the pleasingly indecorous eccentrics, some of whom were wobbling about on chairs, brow-furrowed with exertion. They were screaming sounds...words...song lyrics.



The song Livin' On A Prayer by 1980s permhead rockers Bon Jovi, was being screamed as, and acted out as, Standin' On A Chair. Not every night did this happen, I learned; that would be a bit much. But the singalong, a dead pleasure in most pubs, or a pleasure brutalised in to delusional carcrasheeokee, had not perished in the Reform.





Comfortable in my new tangerine/soft rock/real ale club for singing eccentrics, I drank my pint of Barum Original, which is made in a shed in a yard behind the pub. Original is superior home brew, perhaps not as light and sophisticated as some other Devon beers, but with an earthy personality and a certain puppyish moreishness. Some of my friends claim Barum is "rough as dogs", and I know what they mean, even if they are wrong. It is an acquired taste and I acquired it.



As I digested my first pint that evening, the evening dissolved in conversations. Three years after that first visit, and after 18 months away from North Devon, I went to the Reform and spent an hour talking to a man I had never met before. That doesn't happen everywhere.



The Reform is not a venue for cappucino, wi fi, student cocktails, designer lager, or brunch. But if you have a belly for beer, and a brain for conversation, the Reform is your man.






THE REFORM INN, PILTON STREET, BARNSTAPLE

ADAM'S ALE RATING: 4 out of 5

DRINK THIS BEER: BARUM ORIGINAL (4.4 %)






Wednesday 6 August 2008

Sea swimming and the brewing of a strange and ambitious investigation...


Between breast strokes and the sharp outcrops of Rockham Bay, I watched the sun light up the cliffs and tried to percolate the idea for this new blog about beer and pubs. What was my aim? And why do it all?


Well, for what it’s worth, this is the idea: to visit every pub in North Devon and write about what I find.


Simple, in one sense, and yet daunting; there are a lot of pubs, and
I know I will despise some of them, perhaps beyond reason. Love and her beguiling twin sister, loathing, will do battle. But I think, with a measure of brave tenacity, I will prosper among these terrible ordeals...


My motivation is straightforward: I love pubs and beer and I think writing about these twin gods of England will be fun.


Let me set out the stall. There are few times finer, for me - or clearer with unfiltered pleasure - than those moments spent watching the early evening pollen dance in a dimming bar room light. There is brilliant beauty in beer. I claim no expertise but I have a useful ear and eye for people and places and a taste for ale.


So, we'll hopefully have some entertainment and controversy; my intention is not to write the type of reviews commonly found in newspapers, magazines and websites. The authors of these reviews, which are often crammed with cliche, can seem a bit self-important, which is a lazy tendency I intend to avoid, if only because life is too short to bore yourself, let alone anyone else. I will, of course, fail to live up to this boast, but I will, at least, be alert!


I will be free with opinion but limit guff about hops and gravity. I will not grow a beard, unless things get really out of hand, or start playing role-playing games involving wizards.


And I think these explorations will be timely; real beer is undergoing a resurgence in popularity and, perhaps ironically, the two forces which have done most to bolster the fortunes of ale are arguably the gross might of supermarkets and the ubiquity of chain pubs, and one chain in particular, which doesn't need a plug from me.




The supermarkets now stock a range of decent bottled English beer, not to mention foreign imports, alongside racks of tasteless lager. While the ready availability of good ale should be welcomed, there is a fear that home-drinking is bad news for our public houses. I want to investigate.





The chain pub which takes pains to sell properly cellared and served beer deserves its success. But I do not like the idea of the chain pub, for reasons which will become clearer as we go along, just as I do not like the idea of the chain restaurant, and I often equally dislike the reality. Uniformity often leads inexorably towards blandness. During my adventures I intend to explore this paradox: we probably have the greatest ever number of outlets serving decent beer, including off sales, and yet the pubs I cherish most say they are struggling to survive. Why? And can I do anything to help that doesn't involve collecting pint pots?



This blog is independent; I am not sponsored by anybody and am not a member of the Campaign for Real Ale (Camra), although I declare an admiration for that group.





Finally, I will try to visit pubs incognito, although not in disguise...well, maybe a false moustache on holy days.



OK, so that’s the manifesto, but it’s all subject to change as we go along, and dissolve in unexpected directions like all the best barroom stories...we need to start this odyssey as soon as is humanly possible...





There are brisk warnings of catastrophe buzzing from my digital radio and my boy is trying to brutalise the curtains, but, for now at least, a man with hobbies always has somewhere to go.



So let’s go.