Month: May 2011

Pub breakfasts?

Pub breakfastsAnother week starts and the antics of the weekend are just memories, you skipped breakfast and opted for the extra 10 minutes in bed to ease the burden of a new week.  You need to refuel, but where? The Pub?

A Pub for breakfast? For some of us that’s like returning to the scene of the crime, any slight smell of beer could turn your stomach inside out, and you promised that you’d never drink again right?  Could you cut through the scent of floor cleaner and musty spilt alcohol to tuck into a fry up, or some porridge, toast and coffee?

It’s been just over a year since leading pub chain Wetherspoons announced that they were opening their doors to customers at 7am to entice them in for breakfast.  Immediate thoughts from Internet users in March 2010 were mixed, but Wetherspoons are now reportedly selling 400,000 breakfasts a week (that’s a staggering 20 million breakfasts a year), accompanied by 600,000 cups of coffee making them one of the biggest coffee shops in the UK.
Their success could be attributed to their size as a chain but for the independent local pub or small chain it might not be convenient or profitable to open your doors for only a small trickle of customers, but love them or hate them it’s definitely a scheme that is working for Wetherspoons.

Would you consider having breakfast in a pub?  Is it something you regularly do or have done?  As usual let us know by answering the poll below or having a rant on our Facebook page or in our comments section below.

[poll id=”2″]

 

View 1 Comment

National Doughnut Week

National Doughnut Week 2011National Doughnut week is back tomorrow (7th – 14th May), now in its 20th year, bakers all over the UK will be helping raise money for the Childrens Trust, a percentage of each doughnut sale will be donated to the charity, if you’d like to take part you can find out more information on the National Doughnut Week Facebook page.

But wait! This is about cakes! It has nothing to do with pubs, or drinking, or beer!

Well, yesterday we asked you ‘Pub snacks, which is your favourite?‘ Notice there were no sugary foods in the pub snacks poll? In fact, nobody even mentioned a single sugary snack in any of our comments; it was a landslide win for salt based products.  It seems it’s not the done thing to mix sugars and beer. This may be to do with the fact that alcohol consumption raises your blood sugar and the last thing your body will be naturally telling you is “please inject me with a pile of doughnuts”.

We could all be wrong though, leave it to the Americans to show us how to be truly gluttonous, they’ve been mixing beer and doughnuts for some time.  It’s noted that vanilla flavoured doughnuts compliment stouts, lemon (citrus) flavoured doughnuts compliment bitters, and maple glazed doughnuts stuffed with bacon compliment fruit beers.  Unfortunately the run of the mill sugar dusted raspberry jam pumped British doughnut doesn’t really compliment anything other than a nice cup of tea, but there have been no extensive studies, so maybe we should all get out there with a box of doughnuts and see if there is any beer  they go with?  There has to be one…

Did you know?

‘Olykoeks’ (translated as Oily cakes) is the original Dutch name for doughnuts, invented in Holland – these small nut sized pices of dough were fried in pig fat, their popularity soon found themselves spreading westward.

In France they produce a doughnut called the “Pet De Nonne”, which translates as “The Nuns fart”.  Legend has it that the Marmoutier Abbey sister let one go whilst preparing food, amidst the laughter of her piers she stumbled backwards dropping a spoonful of dough mixture into a boiling pot, the outcome being the small doughy delicacy.

If all the doughnuts sold during National Doughnut week were piled together on top of one another they would reach the International Space Station and back again.  “That’s some ladder to space”.

Doughnuts in the UK were originally a long twist of dough, it’s unclear when they adopted the round, jam filled shape we know today. Or the ring shaped doughnut that we associate with the U.S. police force so fondly.  Legend again has it that was a Mr. Hansen Gregory (from the U.S.) who claims to have invented the ring shaped doughnut in 1847 when he was traveling on a steam boat; he was not satisfied with the texture of the centre of the donut so he pressed a hole in the centre with the ship’s pepper box.

Do you know any facts/ legends about dougnuts? Has a doughnut saved your life? Or, do you have a perfect doughnut and beer combination?
Leave a comment below or on our Facebook page.

 

 

View 1 Comment

Pub snacks, which is your favourite?

favourite pub snacksThere’s been a symbiosis with pubs and peanuts as far back as we can remember, introduced into pubs initially as a method to get people to drink more by increasing their salt intake, peanuts became a corner stone snack for pub goers even surviving the urban legend that all communal bar-nuts have traces of other peoples piss on them.

Crisps too have made  a stoic appearance behind bars for decades show casing a rainbow of flavours but ultimately falling back to basics, salt and vinegar, cheese and onion, ready salted.  And lets not ignore the evil that is pork scratching’s, some people will point and stare but there is still a large contingent of pork scratching lovers out there munching through tonnes of fried pig skin each year.

Portions of chips are the ideal sharing platter for you and your friends if you can avoid the ‘ketchup vs. mayonnaise’ feud, and if you’ve just been on a hike you’ll most likely want to recharge your energy with something less salty or calorific and reach for a hearty pub sandwich.  Worth a mention is pizza, creeping into just a few pubs up and down the country, on-site pizzerias have been a real money spinner for some pubs… we’ll ignore fancy coffees and muffins – they simply don’t appear on our snack radar.

So, when you’re at that point in your pub excursion that you need something, not sure what… Not hungry enough for a full on meal, but need a snack, what do you reach for?

[poll id=”1″]

Scotch eggs, Pepperami, onion rings, jellied eels, etc… didn’t make the list, but do you love them in your pub? Tell us how outraged you are in our comments section below!

 

View 3 Comments

BITE: April Update

We hope you all had a great double bank holiday – not long until the final bank holiday for this half of the year!Beer In The Evening

We have updated the stats for April and have now published our Most Viewed pubs of the month. There are amazingly, seven new entries into the top 20! Has the toll of the bank holidays and the good weather shifted where people drink in London? It looks like it. Covent Garden is becoming much more popular than it already was on our site. It could be due to more tourists in town and less people at work. Either way, next month we should be well into the summer season and hopefully start seeing some country pubs in our Top 20!

NOTE: Although the pub ‘The John Snow’ has moved right to number 1, this was mainly because of the pub having massive media attention as we covered by this post.

 


World record Jäger-train

In Mexico they call them “Perla Negra” (Black Pearl), in Finland they call them “Akkuhappo” (Battery Acid), in Germany they call them “Flying Hirsch” (Flying Stag)… in Britain, we know them as Jäger-bombs – a single shot of Jägermeister dropped into a half pint of Red Bull, supposed to give you a ‘kick’ Jäger-bombs are also strangely addictive, once you’ve done one, chances are you will go back for a second.

“Jäger-trains” or “Jäger-rings”, are the theatric method of stacking Jäger-bombs together in a long line ready for the idiots customers to down them in unison.

[watch?v=LjNcUZuP6ro]

Dan & Sean Kelly of The Walkabout, Cardiff, recently broke the Jäger-train record, after 15 hours of setting up the Jäger-train (using 8 staff) the moment of glory was just a few seconds away – as all 3024 Jäger-bombs successfully dropped into their mixers. That’s some feat, and whatever your take on Booze Britain is, … the outcome of the Kelly boys Jäger-train (shown in the video above) is mesmerizing.

Strangely or ironically, the Guinness Book of records, started by Guinness managing director Hugh Beaver in 1951 no longer records the consumption of alcohol amongst its list of achievements, so who knows what happened to all those Jäger-bombs after they were dropped… Who knows?