Thursday, 5 March 2015
The Market, Chesterfield Marketplace
Obviously quite popular with the young and trendy crowd, the Market devotes at least as much energy to its food as to the beer. They lay claim to serving the following: Pale Rider – Kelham Island Moonshine – Abbeydale Landlord – Timothy Taylor Dark Peak - Raw Cornish Knocker - Skinners Blanco Blonde - Sheffield Brampton Mild - Brampton Golden Pippin – Copper Dragon Jaipur – Thornbridge Hooky Gold – Hook Norton but carry only 3/4 selected beers at any one time. The surroundings are fine and the service was adequately friendly. A place to see and be seen, if you're thirty something.
The Royal Oak, Shambles, Chesterfield
You have to look quite hard for the Royal Oak and that might explain why only 2 men and a dog were in there on a perfectly good Wednesday night when we visited. It's certainly worth finding, though, mostly for the quirky interior. The pub is divided into two halves and you have to go outside to get from one half to the other. The lower half houses the TV set, fruit machines and toilets but the other half is the architectural oddity. Apparently it was originally two butcher's shops with upstairs living accommodation and, as you sit amidst the beamed walls, you can peer up into the vaulted ceiling. The range of beer is not extensive but a good pint of Farmer's Blonde was on offer and went down well. If you're in the town centre, certainly worth a visit.
Friday, 20 February 2015
The Peacock, Chatsworth Road, Chesterfield

Rose and Crown, Old Road, Chesterfield

The Tramway Tavern, Chesterfield.

Chesterfield Ale House, West Bar, Chesterfield
In the words of John Cooper Clarke "Limbo, baby, Limbo, It's a doorway in the rain" and the CAH is certainly no more to look at, from the outside, than a doorway. Inside, it's no palace, either, but it has the requisite collection of good ales, at the bar on a mezzanine, and enough basic chairs and tables for the Thursday evening clientele. I had a pint of something light and hoppy from the Ashover Brewery but there were several other choices to be had and all, by today's standards, quite reasonably priced at <£3. The service was also bright and friendly, as were the locals. A good place for a pint, if you're in the town centre.
Thursday, 8 January 2015
The County and Station, Matlock Bath
Local intelligence was that this pub had recently been taken over by the owner of Derby's Furnace Inn (see June 2014) and was being run by the couple who were running the idiosyncratic Abbey Inn in Darley Abbey, so the portents were favourable. However, Matlock Bath, despite its numerical wealth of pubs (5), has always been a bit dead as a drinking location. Nonetheless, we ventured in to find a quiet but welcoming, traditional interior (the fire wasn't lit, though) and a range of beers available. The something or another IPA was bitter to the point of sourness but there was something ("Tiny Rebel", perhaps) with grapefruit notes which was light and refreshing. It'll be interesting to see how this pub develops over time but it looks a good option, if you find yourself in Matlock Bath.
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