Every Pub in Dublin
Saturday, 6 June 2026
Revisit writeup because I feel like it: S1465 Dudleys
Thursday, 4 June 2026
Every pub in... Sallins
Tuesday, 2 June 2026
Revisited pubs, May 2026
While there were some new visits this month, it was another month of mostly re-visits, as they really now all are.
N0007 Clearys, Amiens Street - bit of an inspection visit to make sure it hasn't been ruined by new ownership. It has not.
N0006 Brew Dock, Amiens Street
S1433 O'Sheas Merchant, Merchants Quay
N0215 Fidelity, Queen Street - this is overdue a rewrite now as the writeup is for Dice Bar still.
N0213 Frank Ryans, Queen Street
1011787 Salmon Leap, Leixlip Co. Dublin
N0084 Black Sheep, Capel Street
N2805 Krewe, Capel Street - the drinks offering here has improved since my last visit
S0077 Nearys, Chatam Street
S0106 Porterhouse, Parliament Street
S3178 Street 66, Parliament Street
N0191 Pantibar
Bar Anam - last visited as N0097 Underdog and will also need a writeup
N0082 McGraths, Drumcondra
N1099 The Sackville - last visited as a very different The Sackville!
N0204 P Duggans - lasted visited as Eamonn Reas, but nothing has really changed
N1620 Boco
Monday, 1 June 2026
The Comeback of Thatch - 1980/90s neo-rusticism
S1580 The Rathcoole Inn's thatch, in comparison to basically everything else mentioned here, appears to be genuinely original - the trustworthy Heritage Houses of Ireland Facebook page speculates that it is "'possibly' Ireland's largest surviving historic thatched structure"
DG0478 The Man O War I think is possibly also genuine, has had some issues with its thatch recently - a fire which damaged it, but was not severe enough to force it to close for more than a day.
Saturday, 30 May 2026
Revisit writeup because I feel like it: S1470 Swift
Thursday, 28 May 2026
Revisit writeup because I feel like it: N0020 Juno / Hera
The third in a not-really-a-series of doing a new writuep for somewhere that has both changed drastically since its original writeup, and which I am likely to end up in often enough that it needs to be explained.
Unfortunately, both the previous ones have shut down since I did them; but both were in "cursed premises" of sorts... and this one isn't. So I don't think I'm going to strangle it somehow.
I end up having pre-train drinks in this end of Drumcondra quite a bit, and they nearly always end up being N0082 McGraths. However, this replacement for the Red Parrot has started becoming a bit more common, particularly if I have a longer time to wait, or I'm approaching Drumcondra from the South to begin with.
Juno offers the now fairly common mix of having quite a few craft taps, but not being a "craft beer bar" - there are macro products aplenty here, albeit those may be slightly selected for the cooler end of the market too. By that I mainly mean Beamish, which is having an odd revival both as a cheap pint in "normal" bars and as something people half my age drink in "cool" bars.
The Juno part of the setup here is the bar of the former Red Parrot; with the larger volume of the premises - the former lounge areas - being the Hera restaurant. I quite enjoyed a meal here, which has full availability of Juno drinks during it.
My Classics knowledge is fairly limited so I had to confirm that yes, Juno and Hera are the equivalent goddesses in Roman and Greek mythology; the Queen of the Gods.
On the worry about cursing places with these writeups - Juno did in fact "close" briefly already in late 2024, leading to some actually quite nasty gleeful posts on Facebook from people who wanted a more traditional pub there; and some more respectful but still wrong claims about there "not being enough hipsters".
This closure was for less than two weeks and I believe was solely related to getting Hera ready to open; nothing else. If it turns out doing this revisionary writeups is a curse I'll stop, I promise!
Saturday, 23 May 2026
N1617 Gate Theatre
I warned last Summer that there would be quite a lot of theatres coming. This may be the last, for a little bit anyway - I currently have no more tickets booked!
The Gate opened on this site in 1930, but it is located in the 18th century New Assembly Rooms of the Rotunda Hospital (the Assembly Rooms, without the New, is N2205 Ambassador Theatre next door), and as an older theatre, has a more traditional bar, sited to the rear of the building and overlooking the carpark of the Rotunda Hospital. This makes it both older and yet younger than the remaining grand Victorian theatres in Dublin, comparing building fabric and operational history.
In addition to the "proper" bar, there is a smaller bar selling tea (in china cups), wine and soft drinks close to the main entrance of the auditorium. They also allow drinks in to the auditorium, the first Dublin theatre I have actually experienced that in, with an usher providing plastic glassware to decant at the entries to the auditorium.
I don't review any of the plays I go to see on these ticks, but this one was quite good. And is still running for a bit by the time this writeup gets published, but based on the show seeming to be a total sellout the night I saw it, it may be sold out!