Quizzes & Puzzles25 mins ago
'I'll have my usual,landlord...(or something like that)...
18 Answers
...is that what you say or do you change your tipple to suit your mood.Are you always a voddy person or a beer or gin person.When I go to the pub its a real ale I go for ,at home its cider (cant stand canned beer) or red wines.My uncle used to drink gin and tonic at lunchtime and whisky and water in the evening,as a youngster I asked him why he didnt drink the same all the time.He said he changed his drink because he was afraid if he didnt he might get a liking for one of them.:-)
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Pint of cheap and nasty, fizzy, mass produced, full of chemicals foreign lager if in a pub, little bottles of the same from Sainsbury's if at home (18 for just over a fiver!).
If not driving after about three pints I will go onto Bacardi and Coke but very rare, two or three pints in usually more than enough. Only place they ask me 'the usual'? is the Chinese Take Away! Sweet & Sour Chicken Cantonese Style and a portion of chips - cor, now I fancy that!
If not driving after about three pints I will go onto Bacardi and Coke but very rare, two or three pints in usually more than enough. Only place they ask me 'the usual'? is the Chinese Take Away! Sweet & Sour Chicken Cantonese Style and a portion of chips - cor, now I fancy that!
Have to say I'm with redman and the other real ale fans. Unlike redman, though, I'm all for the 'session beers' at around 3.8. or 4.0. Perhaps redman isn't staying long enough?! Does nobody like you, redman? Seriously, though, I went to a beer festival over here on the Isle of Man (we've had several in recent years) at the weekend, and was a bit underwhelmed by the range put on at any one time. I make my own tasting notes alongside those provided by the organisers.
I don't want to hijack this thread for those who aren't interested in real ale, so out of consideration, might we indulge our tastes on another board?
I don't want to hijack this thread for those who aren't interested in real ale, so out of consideration, might we indulge our tastes on another board?
Come and join me, Clare, in the St Jude's Brewery Tavern!
Around 20 real ales on offer at any time (who needs a 'festival'?), with typical prices at around £2.60 per pint for those poor ignoramuses who don't know that you pay 50p per pint less if you provide your own pewter tankard ;-)
http://www.stjudesbrewery.co.uk/
Around 20 real ales on offer at any time (who needs a 'festival'?), with typical prices at around £2.60 per pint for those poor ignoramuses who don't know that you pay 50p per pint less if you provide your own pewter tankard ;-)
http://www.stjudesbrewery.co.uk/
My locals know my drink so I do not need to order it, it just arrives. In my footy watching pub that's Holt's Best Bitter (£2.10). Also Hameldon from the Rossendale Brewery ((£1.90).
In the house I drink Efes Turkish Pils which I acquired a liking for on holiday.
On hot sunday days drinking outside I like Erdinger Wheat Beer.
Eating out, I like Red Wine. A Chilean Merlot, Or Agentinian Melbec.
In the house I drink Efes Turkish Pils which I acquired a liking for on holiday.
On hot sunday days drinking outside I like Erdinger Wheat Beer.
Eating out, I like Red Wine. A Chilean Merlot, Or Agentinian Melbec.
That sounds like you're in the north-west of England, Gromit.
Around here, in Suffolk, we have to pay rather more. For example, in the Black Boy in Bury St Edmunds (just down the road from the brewery) a pint of Greene King IPA is £2.85, but many other pubs in the town charge £3.10. The other major Suffolk brewery is Adnams but their pubs are usually dearer than GK pubs so (despite the quality of the beer) I'm reluctant to venture into them. In central London I usually expect to pay around £3.60 for a basic pint of bitter but I've paid £4.80 for a pint of premium lager. (Both of those prices are for 'local boozers' rather than for 'tourist traps').
Around here, in Suffolk, we have to pay rather more. For example, in the Black Boy in Bury St Edmunds (just down the road from the brewery) a pint of Greene King IPA is £2.85, but many other pubs in the town charge £3.10. The other major Suffolk brewery is Adnams but their pubs are usually dearer than GK pubs so (despite the quality of the beer) I'm reluctant to venture into them. In central London I usually expect to pay around £3.60 for a basic pint of bitter but I've paid £4.80 for a pint of premium lager. (Both of those prices are for 'local boozers' rather than for 'tourist traps').
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