By
Rob
Question: when is a pub not a pub?
Answer: when it's a bar, or a club, or a supermarket. Nor is it a pub if it's
a newsagents, a butchers, or a bank. Laundrettes aren't pubs either.
You can also safely categorise cobblers, pet shops, and designer
outlets as things that are definitely not pubs.
So what about total fucking dumps? Are they pubs?
That
was the question we were faced with upon arrival at the South Sea in
Broomhill, which claimed to be a pub, despite looking for all the
world like it was, in fact, a total fucking dump (TFD).
That
was the impression we got from the outside, as we looked at the
squat, black-bricked, flat-roofed building that stood in front of us.
It
was the impression we continued to get from the inside, as we glanced
down at the threadbare carpet, complete with interwoven chewing gum
and stains of indeterminate origin. Weird shit hung on the walls, the
furniture looked like it had been retrieved from a skip, and the bar
wasn't dissimilar in appearance to one that your uncle might knock up
in his garage as he crashes headlong into a midlife crisis.
Now,
despite how it sounds, I don't have anything against TFDs. Thanks to
Pubquest, I've been in quite a few. Pubs that are shabby and rundown
are perfectly alright in my book. However, the problem with the South
Sea was that it was deliberately cultivating the TFD aesthetic in
order to qualify, in some bizarre manner, as trendy.
For
instance, where most venues might try and dissuade their clientele
from scrawling shit all over the walls and doors of the toilets, the
South Sea actively encouraged it. I'm not sure why. Perhaps they were
hoping that, mid-piss, their customers would suddenly look up from
the urinal and be struck by the freestyle artwork and grimy urban
feel. Maybe this would have been the case if the graffiti had been
even slightly Banksy-esque, instead of
15-year-old-boy-smoking-weed-in-the-school-toilets-esque.
Slightly perturbed, we approached the bar to scan the pumps for any appealing beers.
Except
we couldn't.
There were no
pumps.
"We
don't have anything on tap," came the explanation from the barman,
obviously prompted by the look of confusion on our faces.
"So
what do you have?" Andy asked.
Helpfully,
the barman replied: "Bottles".
This
statement wasn't delivered as an apology. It wasn't a mistake. The
pumps weren't broken. The pub just didn't have anything on tap. Ever.
Swallowing
down a mouthful of bile, we inquired further and discovered that, if
you weren't drinking spirits, then your options were limited to a few
bottles of lager, cider, or Newcastle Brown Ale. Left with no choice,
we picked two of the latter.
Back
at the table, I could see Andy staring at the label on the back of
the bottle. Slowly, he lifted his gaze to meet mine. I knew what he
was going to say before the words even came out.
"There
isn't a full pint of beer in these bottles," Andy said flatly.
Considering
that the whole point of Pubquest is to drink a pint in every
pub, we couldn't tick the South Sea off our list with one bottle of
Newcastle Brown Ale, and I had no desire to return to the TFD.
It
transpired that one 'Newkie Brown' held 550ml of ale, which was just
18.261ml short of a pint. Therefore, to ensure we were abiding by the
rules, we were forced to buy a third bottle. Of course, we didn't
want to drink more than was strictly necessary, so to be certain of
the measurements we opted to serve the additional beer in a shot
glass, thereby guaranteeing we would have drank just over a pint
each.
I'm fairly confident that, for the barman, it was the first time he'd ever been asked for a bottle of Newcastle Brown Ale and two shot glasses.
Needs must |
Now,
it's at this point in the blog where I have been known to say
something along the lines of 'sitting there at the table, with our
drinks, I actually found myself warming to the pub'.
Not
this time.
In
fact, sitting there at the table, with our drinks, I actually found
myself wondering what the point of the pub was,
which has to be a Pubquest first. All they offered was bottled beer,
which I could have picked up for a fraction of the price at my local
shop. The atmosphere was dead. The surroundings were shit.
I
disliked the South Sea so intensely that, were it left to me, I would
award the pub one solitary star. However, Pubquest is a joint
enterprise and Andy, ever the more generous of the two, felt that the
pub deserved slightly better. He said something about the pub having
'character', or some other vaguely ridiculous notion.
Therefore,
by the good grace of Andy, the pub is saved from sharing bottom
spot with the Hollin Bush.
It's
still a TFD though.
NOTE:
As if to justify absolutely everything I've said, the pub has since
closed down!
Pub: South Sea (3 Spooner Road, S10 5BL)
Rating:
3.5/10
Pint: Newcastle Brown Ale
Brewery: John Smith's Brewery (Tadcaster, North Yorkshire)
NEXT UP: A visit to the Children's Hospital, at The Doctor's Orders...
NEXT UP: A visit to the Children's Hospital, at The Doctor's Orders...
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