Showing posts with label Mikkeller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mikkeller. Show all posts

03 June 2021

London Docklands - Thursday 27 May 2021


For a first stay away from home since December 2019, advantage was taken of a bargain flexible rate at the London Docklands Travelodge in the Republic Estate near East India DLR station.

Faced with the option of a £10 charge to check in early at 12 noon instead of 3pm, a decision was made to save the fee and spend it on beer instead!

Travelling with luggage by train from Newbury, the nearest pub to the hotel featured in CAMRA’s Good Beer Guide and close to a station was Pepper Saint Ontiod, near Crossharbour DLR station.

This Antic pub is situated on the north west edge of Millwall Outer Dock and is approached via Pepper Street and Glengall Bridge.

Si BRAPA Everitt describes Pepper Saint Ontiod as looking like a NHS walk-in centre, in his 11/9/2020 blog post which includes more photos. Si also thanks ‘a kind Twitter person called Mr Bravery’ for explaining the pub name - ‘they’ve made Street into Saint’ and Ontiod is ‘On The Isle Of Dogs’. Now you know!

Outside tables give good views of the dock and a row of three cranes. Some tables next to the railings are in the sun while others are shaded.

Looking into the pub, there were three handpumps on the bar but only two had pump clips and these were for beers from Antic Pub Company’s house brewery - Volden Pale and Volden Session Ale.


Thinking that there might only be time for one pint I ordered Volden Pale (4.6% ABV) which was served in a dimpled glass with a handle. This had a fresh tangy bitterness and was refreshing in the sunshine, especially after the journey by bus, train, tube and Docklands Light Railway.

It turned out that there was time for another pint and an opportunity to enjoy Volden’s Session Ale, a 3.8% ABV bitter which is excellent value at £3.30 pint.

On 20 April 2021, Volden had tweeted

London prices

Got you down?

Try our beer

To fix that frown

Volden Session. A mere £3.30 at @AnticPubs up and down London #threepintsatenner #CraftBeer

Inside the pub there are two levels with a variety of mirrors and a quirky collection of items on display to add character to the functional stairway that leads to the upstairs toilets.

After a bus ride to Poplar from outside Crossharbour DLR station and a walk to check in at the hotel there was time to visit East India Dock Basin, Trinity Buoy Wharf and Virginia Settlers’ Monument before a 7pm table booking at BrewDog.

The Canary Wharf BrewDog is located at 2 Churchill Place, at the east end of the main Canary Wharf commercial district and near a bridge over Bellmouth Channel which links North Dock and South Dock.

The outside seating area has windows on three sides and the roof was open on our visit. We were given a warm welcome and shown to a seat at our table. It was a relief not to be seated at the central long high table. Customers are encouraged to use an App to order drinks but it proved possible to order from a passing member of staff who was very helpful.

It was Mikkeller Showcase week and two thirds of a pint of the Mikkeller Henry Hops (4.1% ABV) was pale, hoppy and refreshing.

Sticking with relatively low alcohol beers, my choice of a guest beer from Swansea, a half pint of Beer Riff Finger Gunzzz IPA was pale and clear with some honey sweetness.


After dining at Franco Manca, a wander around Canary Wharf led to The Ledger Building, a Wetherspoon pub situated near the Museum of London Docklands. Unfortunately the Wetherspoon App only offered a choice of Doom Bar or Greene King IPA and we moved on with the intention of visiting The Henry Addington, a Nicholson’s pub on the north side of Middle Dock. However we found ourselves on the south side of Middle Dock and ended up catching a bus to Poplar instead.

The D8 bus passed The Pensioner in Bazely Street so we got off at All Saints Church and walked back to it past the churchyard and Mountague Place. The traditional Taylor Walker sign and glazed green tiles looked attractive in the light from the pub’s lamps. Taking a peek inside through the pub’s high windows showed that several tables were occupied and it was obvious from signs at the bar that an interesting range of keg craft beers are served here.

There would be opportunities for cask ale elsewhere tomorrow!



09 October 2018

Skaal, Copenhagen

Recent trips to Copenhagen have usually included a (free) visit to the Davids Samling / The David Collection, Kronprinsessegade 30-32, overlooking the green space of Kongens Have.
As well as the Islamic art which the gallery is renowned for, there is an inner room with paintings by Vilhelm Hammershøi that should not be missed.
On Friday 14 September, I was also able to view 'The Hippie Trail' an exhibition of slides and photos by Torben Huss, who first set off eastwards to Afghanistan from Copenhagen in the 1960s.

Leaving after 3pm, with time to fill before Bicycle Brewing opened at 4pm, left me with a choice between revisiting a favourite - Charlie's Bar (one minute by bike) or a first visit to Skaal Beer & Food, which opened on 21 September 2017 (two minutes by bike).
Feeling adventurous, I decided to visit Skaal, on the corner of a square, near Nørreport station, at Kultorvet 11. The Skaal tables in the square were fairly busy.
However, there were only a few customers inside when I entered the bar on the first floor.
'Good to see you!'
A welcome sign gives a good first impression.
At the top of the stairs a diagram explains the brewing process.
There are 48 draught beers to choose from with details on the screens behind the bar.
I ordered a 25cl glass of k:rlek 12, the 12th edition of Mikkeller's hazy pale ale, brewed with Mosaic hops, costing 42 Dkr (£5).
From my stool at a table in the dim interior of the bar, there was a view towards the tables by the windows which overlook the square.
Another room provides seating away from the main bar with specially commissioned artwork.
There is a mural on the opposite wall and fridges filled with bottles of beer at the far end.
By now it was after 4pm and Skaal was getting busier so I left to retrieve my parked bicycle and pedal to Bicycle Brewing in Østerbro, which would seem tiny in comparison to Skaal!

This visit to Skaal satisfied my curiosity but my current recommendation for a bar in this part of Copenhagen would be to visit Charlie's which is more like a pub, has cheaper prices and even serves cask ale from the UK!

Charlie's Bar, Pilestræde 33, Copenhagen

Skaal Beer & Food, Kultorvet 11, Copenhagen

Bicycle Brewing, Ålborggade 20, Copenhagen