Friday, 18 December 2015

Pub 88, Day 34 – The Psalter

By Andy

What a waste of time.

In between our trip to The Psalter and me writing this blog, the pub shut. Permanently.

This renders our visit completely pointless, as it takes us no closer to 'completing the set'.

Even more infuriatingly, because we actually attended, we feel immense pressure to write a blog regardless, lest our readers miss out on a chapter of our journey.

Don't put the kettle on: I'll keep it brief.

***

For presumably the first time in history, Pubquest had a female majority, as we were joined by Ali, Reanna and Hannah – all three of whom will loudly proclaim to anyone within earshot how lame Pubquest is, yet who were returning for their second, third and sixth(!) day of Pubquest respectively. Anyone would think they were starting to enjoy it.

The Psalter is an elongated building – two stone wings connected by a dilapated mid-section that looks like the sort of temporary structure your school no doubt used as an RE classroom.

Inside, it feels more like a pub: the carpets were patterned, the furniture was pre-loved and the staff were friendly.

The pub's impressive size meant there were numerous empty tables to choose from, and our advancing years meant we were beginning to see this as an asset rather than a liability – we picked a quiet corner to ourselves.

In a Pubquest first, we actually
remembered to take a photo of our food
As we hadn't eaten, we ordered an assortment of 2-for-1 stone-baked pizzas, which were surprisingly tasty. However, their oval shape led to a familiar conundrum – how are you meant to slice pizza if the base isn't round? I opted for the 'hacking off random slabs' approach, whereas Rob admirably attempted to converge his slices through a centre-point.

We paired it with Good For Your Elf by Kelham Island Brewery, a pale ale for which taste is irrelevant because everybody chooses it based on the festive pump-clip.

The pub was fine enough, but looking back there were hints that the end was nigh – the building was suffering from a severe lack of investment, and the pub was suffering from a severe lack of customers.

UPDATE: When I wrote this, it looked as though the pub was going to be turned into flats. However, that seems to have fallen through, and there are rumours The Psalter could reopen as a pub once more. This would put the tin lid on it – not only did we go to a pointless pub and write a pointless blog, but I would then have to rewrite said pointless blog because the introduction would be outdated!

Pub: The Psalter (178-180 Psalter Lane, S11 8US)
Rating: 8/10

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