30 March 2019

Brussels (South) - Monday 25 March 2019

Occasional rain showers and a cold wind did not deter us from exploring Ixelles and Saint Gilles neighbourhoods on our final day in Brussels.
Church of the Holy Trinity at west end of Rue du Bailli
We caught tram 81 from Bara stop, near Brussels Midi to Flagey in Ixelles district.The route involved a climb up to Saint Gilles and then an eastward level stretch before dipping down to Flagey Square at the top end of the Ixelles ponds.
The former National Institute for Radio Broadcasting (NIR) building on the south of the square was renamed Flagey in 2002. The art deco building known as the steamboat was designed by Joseph Diongre and built during 1935-38 to include sound studios and a concert hall. Nowadays the building includes cafes and bars near the public entrance.
It was too windy to walk around the ponds so we just looked at the varied buildings overlooking the north end of the ponds and spotted some blossom. We then headed west, back up the hill, towards Avenue Louise, in search of buildings designed by Victor Horta in his distinctive Art Nouveau style.
Hotel Solvay / Solvay Townhouse (Avenue Louise 224) was completed in 1900 for industrialist Armand Solvay.
400 metres to the north west is Hotel Tassel / Tassel Townhouse (6, Rue Paul-Emile Janson) completed in 1894.
It was time for a beer and seeing lights on at RamDam, behind the Church of the Holy Trinity, we went inside only to be told that the bar was closed. A visit after 4pm is recommended if you want to find the bar open, as mentioned in CAMRA's Good Beer Guide Belgium.
The nearby Horta Museum (25, Rue Américaine) is closed on Mondays but there is plenty of detail on the exterior frontage to enjoy for free.
Victor Horta's house and studio were built between 1898 - 1901.
A short walk passing Janson tram stop led to La Belladone in Rue Moris.
The shutters were up and although we were too early for the 6pm opening time at least there was a chance to view the stylish copper plated bar through the left window.
CAMRA's Good Beer Guide Belgium describes La Belladone as an 'excellent, mellow, candlelit Art Nouveau cafe'.
Across the road at the junction with Rue d'Espagne we finally found a cafe bar that was open on a Monday lunchtime. Inside Cafe Amara we had a choice of tables and picked the sunny side.
While Simon adopted my suggestion of Orval as a Trappist beer to start the day with I opted for a refreshing 2.5% ABV Lindemans Pecheresse 'born of a fling between a Lambic and peach juice'.
The constant sound of the tall fridge next to my seat in a far corner reduced the impact of the pop songs playing on the bar's sound system.
Leaving at 1.15pm the walk to Brasserie de l'Union was downhill all the way. The photo (above) of Place Louis Morichar shows the typical gradient and the dark clouds that threatened rain.
We arrived at Brasserie de l'Union when nearly all the tables insede were busy with luncthime diners. We found a small table free next to a couple with a sleeping baby in a carrier draped with thin fabric.
Simon had his back to the wall but I had a clear view of the menu on the high blackboard and the 'beer suggestions' on a low blackboard. We had plenty of time to decide before the waiter arrived. The explanation of soup of the day was not in recognisable English but was my choice anyway while Simon ordered a 'petit' lasagne.
Only two of the locally brewed L'Annexe beers on the blackboard were available so Simon ordered Saison de Bruxelles and I had L'Union (Saison Edition Speciale). Both Saisons were 6% ABV and cost 3.50 euros.
The brewery is named after the building where they brew - L'Annexe of the Van der Kelen school at Rue du Metal, 19. With no taproom at the brewery, Brasserie de L'Union is a good alternative place to sample these beers.
By 2pm most of the diners had departed and this appeared to be the sign to switch on the sound system for some background music.
While paying the bill at the bar counter there was an opportunity to get a photo of the tall beer fridge to show some of the bottled beers available at Brasserie de L'Union.
By now it was 2.45pm and we had time for one more drink before heading to Brussels Midi for the 16.58 Eurostar train back to London. We walked along the pedestrianised Marche du Parvis de Saint-Gilles and were tempted by Brasserie Egalite but instead entered Cafe Maison du Peuple.
Inside the historic building, which dates from 1917, many of the tables near the front windows were occupied by people with laptops. While Simon enjoyed draught Brussels Beer Project Delta IPA it was coffee time for me. Seven other beers are available in bottles including De Ranke XX Bitter.
The large space is well suited to music events and there is a low stage at the back of the room with an idyllic mural behind. When the stage is not in use there are large sofas on it. The music playing on the sound system included Van Morrison's Cypress Avenue (more than once).
Simon's suggestion of catching the Metro back to Lemonnier to collect luggage from the hotel was a good idea as the pavements were wet from recent rain when we emerged.
There was time to stock up with some bottles from Carrefour Express inside Brussels Midi station before joining the short queue for security checks at the 'Channel Terminal' prior to boarding the Eurostar back to London.



19 March 2019

Liverpool 2019 - Sunday 13 January

Day 3 in Liverpool and a third (later) breakfast at the Lime Kiln with welcome free refills of coffee as provided by Wetherspoon pubs. Once again our CAMRA group took over the front area of the ground floor.
The distant building, in the photo above, is McCooley's, facing Concert Square.

The Ship & Mitre

After breakfast, a 15 minute walk led us to the Ship & Mitre in Dale Street, which opens at 10am on Sundays. The corner pub, opposite the Mersey Tunnel entrance, stands out with its art deco style and cream and blue colour scheme.
After posting a photo of the pub, once owned by Bent's Brewery, from my Twitter account some replies from beer writers followed (above) with an explanation that 'Bents' used to be part of the signage - between Ales and Stouts.
A group was leaving just as we arrived so we were able to secure the slightly raised area at the front corner of the Ship & Mitre. We liked the pub, service and beers so much that we would remain here for three hours!
As a change from my favoured pale ale style, a pint of Jar porter by Flagship Beer was an introduction to the Ship & Mitre's own beers which are cuckoo brewed on a 4 barrel kit. The 4.7% ABV Jar is brewed with spicy rye and roasted malts.
There was time for a chat with Tom Anderson on a subsequent visit to the bar and Tom posed with one of my last copies of West Berkshire CAMRA's Ullage magazine.
Tom mentioned that apart from his work at the pub he is also the brewer / owner of Tyton brewery based in Ainsdale, Southport. Tom knows Angus Morrison, now Head Brewer at Birkenhead's Glen Affric Brewery, from his brewing training. Tom is naming Tyton's beers after owls e.g. Tawny and Morepork.
My next beer was a half pint of Flagship Lupa, dry with citrus peel flavours, brewed with Syrian Wolf hops and costing £1.50.
It was also nice to meet Kurt Watson, the Ship & Mitre's manager. Kurt is originally from Basildon in Essex but liked Liverpool and its people so much while he was a student in the city that he stayed on.
Petra, on keg, from Flagship Beer was my third and favourite beer at the Ship & Mitre. The 4% ABV Citrus Hefe-Weiss cost £1.50 for 1/3 pint. The pub's beer menu lists 37 German bottled beers and other European keg and bottled beers are also available reflecting its claim to be the 'home of the largest drinks range in Liverpool'.
Home cooked food is available all day from the Galley including their famous Scouse.
Thanks must go to tankard for generously ordering a jug of Silhouett by Flagship Beer so that we could all taste it before moving on. Kurt delivered and poured the 4.5% ABV dry Irish stout for us. He was about to finish his shift at the pub and confided in us that his staff had been asking him if he was bipolar because he was being so nice to everyone! Evidence suggests that the Ship & Mitre's claim to be 'where you'll receive great service from friendly and knowledgeable staff' is fully borne out!
 Before leaving we explored other parts of the spacious pub and noted the blackboard with a diagram showing 'How is beer made?'.
The view from the other side of the partition wall with the blackboard reveals that the rear area is also raised and surrounded by brass rails.

The Excelsior

Leaving the pub at 2.45pm, it was less than a minute's walk west from the Ship & Mitre, past an office block, to the Excelsior also in Dale Street.
This was another deep and spacious pub but more plushly decorated with curtains and ornamental lamps. We found an area where we could sit together by the etched windows. The text on the wall is similar to the opening lines from Roger McGuinn's Liverpool Gals including
'And it's row, row
   bullies row
         Those Liverpool Judies
        have got us in tow'

My beer here was a favourite - Salopian Lemon Dream (£1.75 1/2 pint), a 4.5% ABV pale golden ale brewed using organic lemons. The Everton v Bournemouth football match was screened on a TV and the game would end with a 2-0 win for Everton, whose Goodison Road ground is 2 1/2 miles north.
Leaving the pub at 3.45pm we passed the impressive Liverpool City Council offices on our 3 minute walk further west down Dale Street to the Vernon Arms.

The Vernon Arms


On the corner with Vernon Street, the Vernon Arms only has a narrow frontage on Dale Street.
Our group occupied the round tables in main central area inside, opposite the long bar. The football match was also being screened here. Unusually there is a sloping floor.
A range of seven cask ales at the bar of the free house included Windmill Brewery Taonga, an 'Ultra Pale Ale'.
There is a framed plan of Liverpool and Birkenhead docks on an end wall, under a clock. Framed Édouard Manet prints on other walls include Olympia, Luncheon on the Grass and Un Bar aux Folies Bergère (with its bottles of Bass identified by the red triangle trademark).
Leaving the pub at 4.45pm, we passed the Royal Insurance Building, now the Aloft hotel. The illuminated frieze, designed by C. J. Allen, depicts themes relating to insurance.
We also passed Thomas Rigby's on Dale Street before turning north into Hackins Hey and passing the Lady of Mann just before entering Ye Hole In Ye Wall.

Ye Hole In Ye Wall

Proceeding to the bar of Ye Hole In Ye Wall, known as Liverpool's oldest pub, there is evidence of stained and leaded glass panels.

With a choice of six cask ales, I opted for Red Star Brewery Formby IPA
The 4% ABV session IPA with a hint of elderflower is hopped with Cascade and New Zealand hops. 
Once again, our group was able to find a convenient place to sit together in an area with upholstered seats and wood panelling above. 
As GBG pub bloggers like Martin Taylor and Simon Everitt sometimes include photos of unusual signs for toilet facilities, I couldn't resist taking a photo of the elegant sign used for the Gents at Ye Hole In Ye Wall. At 5.45pm there was a consensus that we should find somewhere for a meal. We were turned away at the first place we tried 'not enough room' and I joined a splinter group that would head for Peter Kavanagh's while most would continue the search for a restaurant in the Moorfields area.
With Liverpudlian Tony in my small group, we headed via pedestrian Mathew Street in the Cavern Quarter to the Elliot Street bus stop, opposite the The Richard John Blackler (Wetherspoon). 

Peter Kavanagh's

An 86 bus took us uphill to Catharine Street for £2.30 and then it was only three minutes walk to Peter Kavanagh's on a corner of Egerton Street. The bar is festooned with unusual objects and there are hand pumps for three cask ales - Black Sheep Resolution,  The Mobberley Brewhouse Boom Juice and Hook Norton Cold Turkey on our visit. Payment is by cash only.
We took our drinks into one of the bar areas near where a variety of radios were suspended from the ceiling. Another splinter group, that included Rachel, was already here so we joined them until they departed. A ukulele group was playing and one of the songs performed was Homeward Bound. Tony mentioned that Paul Simon wrote this song while waiting for a train back to London station at Widnes station after a performance in Liverpool. 
Decor in another area of the pub includes a bicycle and a poster for the Liverpool Overhead Railway.
My plan was to call in at the Grapes where jazz music is played on a Sunday night but Tony's route did not allow for this so we arrived instead at the Head of Steam in Hanover Street at 8.45pm.

The Head of Steam

My first beer at the Head of Steam was Fab Four a 4.4% ABV 'Liverpool IPA' brewed by Rock the Boat Brewery. The four 'sensational UK hops' used are Admiral, Flyer, Cascade and Target.
More from our group joined us later bringing our numbers up from three to ten.
My last cask beer of the day was Sanctuary by Camerons Brewery of Hartlepool. (Camerons owns the 15 strong Head of Steam chain of pubs).
Sanctuary is a permanent ale from Cameron's Anchor brand and is a 3.8% ABV pale ale dry hopped with Citra hops. After four days of exploring the pubs of the Liverpool area it was finally time to say goodbye to my CAMRA friends and head back to the nearby hotel. Cheers!