Wednesday, 31 July 2019

N1090 Hacienda Bar

As far as I know, there's only two pubs in Dublin where you need to be buzzed in - this and 1004033 Vintage Cocktail Club in Temple Bar. The doors remain closed here and it can be quite hard to tell if it is actually open or not - and it was actually closed for a few weeks recently for filming.

There's a large black and white CCTV monitor beside the bar, from where the staff can decide if you are going to be let in or not - or come out to you if you're standing outside wondering if its actually open before pressing the buzzer, as happened to us.

The pub has an - accurate - reputation as somewhere you may run in to a celebrity or two; but it manages this without being like Lillies in the Tiger era. Its not expensive by any definition, for starters. You may have to run in to a political birthday party, or whoever else famous is passing through - Jack Gleeson being the most recent mentioned on their Facebook.

The walls of the bar are covered in photos of the owner with these various celebs; which could make for a way to pass the time if you were somehow in here and bored. That's not likely to be the case, as the bar is likely to be quite busy - and there's small sized pool tables anyway

Monday, 29 July 2019

N2760 Koh

This Thai restaurant has an extensive cocktail menu, which I presume you can go to without eating - why else would you go to the expense of obtaining and maintaining a full pub licence otherwise?

We went in to eat, though - but had cocktails with the meal. The foods fine, nothing spectacular and likely to be similar to what you'll have in any other Thai in the city. 

The cocktails were quite good, but there was a distinct consistency issue - one ordered at the start of the meal and one of the same ordered again for the other diner were quite different. Presumably two bar tenders with different ideas of what they should be, but it doesn't give a great impression.

Thursday, 25 July 2019

1015498 Penny Lane

One of the smallest completely new venues in Dublin in years - possibly the smallest for decades I'd guess - this is a sister bar to N0191 Pantibar across the road, operating an even more limited set of opening hours. Its also the first new premises to initially open as an LGBT venue that I'm aware of.

An attractive restoration/building conversion, this was ready to open in February but had minor issues delaying the licencing and only opened in June.


There's a smaller range of draught beer here than across the road; made up for by a wider range of spirits and mixed drinks; and the prices are higher - there's a lot less space to fill with customers, so this is probably expected.

Tuesday, 23 July 2019

1015767 The Silver Penny

JD Wetherspoon premises in the UK are often repurposed buildings, with cinemas, banks and churchs popping up quite frequently - an example of each is in The Sun's "10 weirdest Wetherspoons" listicle that you can find yourself if you want to read it; and of the cinema and bank variety in the far more wholesome Londonist "11 of the Best Wetherspoons in London" listicle that I am willing to link to.

Their rollout in Ireland hadn't had any of these, yet - all premises were already pubs or nightclubs until this one opened. And they've managed to get a two-for-one here, as this was formerly a bank AND a church. The former Dublin Savings Bank comprises the bulk of the pub, with the former Gospel Hall next door giving more a more dining room styled area - if anything can be more like a dining room than a normal Wetherspoons layout!

This is a vast premises when all areas on the three floors are added together, and it has the standard lack of character that Wetherspoons suffer from. Its quite hard to say exactly what the issue is - possibly the small identikit tables festooned with menus and condiments might be part of it. Slightly disinterested staff could also be part of the problem.

The standard of food in the Irish branches has been poor to mediocre so far; but I would hope that with the very significant quantity they'll be able to flog here that they might put a bit more effort in. With the low prices - "premium" pints under a fiver, pints available for under €3 - it should be a decent place to get a meal with a few drinks; but it needs to change to be somewhere you'd want to go for a few pints. And I'm not quite sure what the changes required are.

The price competition is welcome, at least. Dublin is an expensive city to do business in but some prices nearby are clearly out of step with what they could be.

Saturday, 20 July 2019

1013563 National Gallery

Fifteen quid for a sandwich and a bottle of lager. Fifteen quid.

Friday, 19 July 2019

S0093 McDaids

Another - but not the final, there'll probably never be a final - of the pubs that come up when thinking of the "famous pubs" that I'd not yet been to. One of the "literary pubs" - realistically those trading off the drinking habits of writers a few decades ago - McDaids has another claim to fame, as it has even given Dublin lore a barman that many know by name - Paddy O'Brien

Like many city centre pubs, its rammed the majority of the time; but I visited quite early on a Sunday. There weren't many other customers, but they'd clearly been drunk near dry the previous night - my first choice of pint was out, and the second choice required a keg change.

There's a cluster of nice smaller pubs in this area of the city - S0077 Nearys, 1007737 Peters Pub and S0078 Sheehans for instance. This fits in well with them from my non-representative-time-of-day visit.

Wednesday, 17 July 2019

S3840 Graingers / The Fountain

Eternally for sale (at least as long as I've tracked pub sales), this is now the most dated of the Meath Street pubs; despite having been the most modern quite recently. Refits and/or complete changes of target audience have changed the market on the street quite significantly

My grandmother had an opposition to ever using the word "cheap" except when criticising something of poor quality; so reflecting that I shall refer to the pints here as "affordable". They are amongst the most affordable pints in Dublin; and don't come with quite the same problems as some similarly priced venues - indeed checking my review of two years ago of 1009700 The Snug, its still slightly cheaper  more affordable (€8 rather than €8.10) here without any sign of the problematic crowd The Snug gets

The estate agent ad gives you a good impression of what the pub looks like; and indeed some of the atmosphere - the TV playing RTE Gold is visible in one of them just as it was when I visited.

Its possible that someone may buy this place and do a deep refit or change the theme of the pub entirely; but for now its a fairly standard pub for its location in terms of clientele and atmosphere. You know what you're going to get, and you won't pay very much for it.

Friday, 5 July 2019

S1456 Lark Inn

Once one of the ugliest and generally off-putting pubs - from the outside - in Dublin, the Lark Inn has been significantly renovated in recent years including a new, inviting shopfront. You can toggle between different eras of images on Streeview to see the transformation.

I've a feeling the interior of the pub has only been refreshed and the clientele remains the same - so this should serve as an example of where you shouldn't judge a book by its cover a pub by its window height!

What you get (and can now see before getting) is a traditional Liberties pub, split in to a bar and a lounge and offering quite cheap pints. The brief description in the Irish Times last year seems accurate enough to me

Wednesday, 3 July 2019

July 2019 licence update

Very small update this month, and very quick to process - only three additional lines in the entire trimmed file as we approach the end of the licencing year

Additions
1015462 UCD O'Reilly Hall - full pub licence for what is a conferencing centre, this will be annoying to get!

Removals
1011474 White Hart Inn, Balbriggan - to be converted to residential use

Tuesday, 2 July 2019

S0025 Madigans (Leeson Street)

Recently reopened, this was the East Side Tavern and Eamonn Dorans Tavern On The Green in recent memory. A partial refit - mainly new furniture from what I can see - has been done to bring it back in to use.

When I last drank in this area of the city, I felt it odd how quiet and dead this corner of Stephens Green was - it was approaching Christmas but with this closed, Houricans boarded up and nothing on in the Sugar Club that night, the small crowd from Hartigans wasn't enough to make it lively. Now with Madigans open and Houricans released from its tomb (albeit still closed), it's a bit better. I'm hoping that the works to Houricans suggest it might be next.

A fairly small pub, they manage to do a full food menu here, and there's a large enough range of drink options. I expect this incarnation to last a bit longer than the last two - Madigan Group have decades of experience and while they do close or sell on pubs, they don't often do it in a hurry.