Every Pub in Dublin
Saturday, 20 June 2026
EPITR: 1019263 Crolly Distillery
Thursday, 18 June 2026
Revisit writeup because I feel like it: Bar Anam
Well, I had to go back and see what had been done to Underdog, didn't I.
(I promise the sky is real, Dublin had some really nice late Spring weather)
The kitchen's open, there's some macros on the taps and it's been painted, with new furniture. But some of the regular customers are still around, there's still a range of craft offerings (some slightly less common) on the taps.
Operated by the same people who run Dudleys, another recent re-writeup oddly enough; there are some similarities in the two pubs, but plenty of difference too. Dudleys offers fairly conventional pub grub, but Bar Anam has Dak offering Korean food to the rear of the pub. Dudleys is quite a lot larger, with a bar and lounge split, and the lounge itself having a mezzanine; and this space allows them to have live music.
Dudleys has TVs, and Bar Anam doens't - yet. I happened to be there while one of the owners was present and had a chat about the pub and their plans; and TVs or a protector for occasional use are under consideration. Underdog would also occasionally use one of its menu screen TVs to show free-to-air sports coverage, so this wouldn't be a change from what went before.
It's not the same as it was, but it is already it's own thing. I'll be back - indeed I have already been back between this first visit and the writeup.
Tuesday, 16 June 2026
June 2026 Revenue register update
This one's late due to me, not Revenue. There's so little to add that I never got around to it!
New: 1023199 Maldron Hotel Croke Park, Clonliffe Road.
Saturday, 13 June 2026
1998 in The Docklands - an Evening Herald pub crawl of sorts
Thursday, 11 June 2026
Revisit writeup because I feel like it: 1021467 Fidelity
So many of the places I do re-writes for have changed utterly in between the time of my initial visit and the revisit. Atmosphere, crowd, and drinks offerings may have been completely upended
In this case, the changes to some of those are less major - but the changes to the physical pub itself are immense.
My initial writeup here was for Dice Bar, a bar known for its music choices, connected (at one point) to a brewery and generally seen as quite cool. It was, however, an absolute dump in terms of physical structure and fittings; deliberately going for a dive bar aesthetic.
Fidelity is known for its music, connected to the Whiplash brewery and generally seen as quite cool. But it has had a high end refit, and now does not sell macro brewery products at all.
Since the demise of Underdog, I've been here more often than I had been prior - but I did come here occasionally anyway. Those who bother looking at my monthly revisit lists will have seen that, and indeed it is having to link to the Dice Bar writeups that has lead me to do this new entry.
The licence number has also changed, from an original system one to a new one. This is almost certainly because the licence has been extended to the unit next door, now operating as Fidelity Studio; an extension of the space with a food offering.
The old Dice Bar interior fittings were claimed to be in storage, awaiting the former operator finding a new space. I haven't heard anything on this since that claim was made in 2020, but things may yet occur.