PDA

View Full Version : Real Ale, Real Music - A Maiden Visit....



Blog Tracker
14-11-2023, 17:50
Visit Real Ale, Real Music (https://chrisdyson55.blogspot.com/2023/11/a-maiden-visit.html)

A brand new blog breaking new ground by visiting a completely new area for me. Football was involved, of course, but what would the pub and beer situation be like? And where would it be? Read on to find out....

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2E-epFrYykygFlI9y4CxcvSQoMvh8QULshf6R_-axY4Nf0VZaLKIKKl2lnDuKpZNgJc5k8B6EAaH2po56dQ7aRN3p NkTUqCNqnKQgCq3eo-_V297eKJMJt3R-qrtsBnv6nwXr6lgocaM6wgL4Qr7kHdsk6FOJ79bxY46N8iZ8Y7 Dl9pzhBaEFaB9Fk18/w640-h360/DSC_6692.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2E-epFrYykygFlI9y4CxcvSQoMvh8QULshf6R_-axY4Nf0VZaLKIKKl2lnDuKpZNgJc5k8B6EAaH2po56dQ7aRN3p NkTUqCNqnKQgCq3eo-_V297eKJMJt3R-qrtsBnv6nwXr6lgocaM6wgL4Qr7kHdsk6FOJ79bxY46N8iZ8Y7 Dl9pzhBaEFaB9Fk18/s4032/DSC_6692.JPG)

I haven't been to watch FC Halifax Town as much this time around, but at the start of the season we had discussed one or two potential away trips where we would have a stop over. So having signed up early doors, four of us set off early last Saturday morning to visit Maidenhead, where we hoped to be able to come back with the points and enjoy a few pints in this corner of Berkshire. And of course I was hoping to find enough suitable material to put together a new blog!
Maidenhead is situated just off the M4 and close to the M40, and with a railway connection that gets you to London Paddington in 24 minutes as well as having services to more local places like Windsor and Reading, the town, which takes its name from its location where a new wharf or 'maiden hythe' was built in Saxon times, is handily located. The town centre, whilst it wouldn't win any awards for its looks, is compact, with the railway station, football ground, three of the town's five CAMRA pubs, and the Travelodge where we stayed the night all very close together. With a few delays on the M1 coming down, our journey took just over 4 and a half hours, but once we had got parked up near the hotel, we were amble around to the first pub and be drinking our first pint before the clock struck 1.30.



https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3570zW0HeJp4tS9JuwFsNSJXcRhYx0rrKw_kHRYCAwn-IitgZ8LomVt7kjb9FD3k5QOc_0ChuCTZN__FSHhBY8dUnORdrV OXeJqkLxMxCiQqPTrVvNfFau8yvCLo7ecMgesFhFTmL8RYEgBo Ysa_aLzTgQttifISCUmYT4JxIYMRBWs1kPixLJFCMS08/w640-h360/DSC_6682.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3570zW0HeJp4tS9JuwFsNSJXcRhYx0rrKw_kHRYCAwn-IitgZ8LomVt7kjb9FD3k5QOc_0ChuCTZN__FSHhBY8dUnORdrV OXeJqkLxMxCiQqPTrVvNfFau8yvCLo7ecMgesFhFTmL8RYEgBo Ysa_aLzTgQttifISCUmYT4JxIYMRBWs1kPixLJFCMS08/s4032/DSC_6682.JPG)

Our first pub was the predictably-named Maiden's Head (well, somebody was bound to do it!), a pleasant enough town-centre pub with various separate areas within its general open-plan design. There were 4 hand pumps on the bar, as well as a number of craft beers in keg. From the cask range, we all went for pints of Rebellion IPA, a 3.7% copper-coloured beer, quite malty and sweet, with a dry finish (NBSS 3), and was a pleasant-enough beer to start the day. The brewery is based in Marlow, across the border in Buckinghamshire, and has steadily grown since being established in 1993. We were joined by a group of familiar Town fans, who had travelled down by train, and we compared notes on our respective journeys.


The next pub was only a couple of minutes walk away, a large and prominent traditional pub called the Bear, which is now a JD Wetherspoon house whose thresholds, as regular readers will know, I rarely cross. But we were relatively short on time, and whilst my pint of the 3.8% Windsor & Eton Knight of the Garter golden session ale was thin on flavour but too sweet for my taste (NBSS 2.5), I did at least have the consolation of picking up the tab for the round here, which have barely covered the cost of two pints in most of the other places we went over the day. But don't get me started about the breakfast we had here the following morning....


Much better was our final stop before going to the football. A Hoppy Place was a modern bar and bottle and can shop offering both cask and keg beers based on the ground floor of a residential development. Apparently it opened in 2022 following in the footsteps of a sister bar in Windsor. and features 4 cask ales and 14 keg lines. Today there were beers on offer from breweries such as Siren, Stardust, Tartarus, and Verdant, and from the cask range there was unanimity again as all four of us went for pints of Devotion, from Norfolk-based brewers Duration. This was a 4.4% hazy pale featuring the Motueka hop, which I have found that sometimes on its own can be a little bland, but it was certainly not the case with this. Well-balanced and smooth, it was easily the most enjoyable of our pre-match beers, and indeed one of the best of the day (NBSS 3.5). The atmosphere here was friendly and relaxed, and featured a number of football supporters from both teams and family groups as well as beer afficionados.



https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhhfjS7HQ7vdvCkimI1DUKqiMOrmlriQB2h2XbpNqiCQH qO2gtJXXHFs21GGjruYaUbqgaPsZcCp9-Aq8Z93s8AYRoOSm0KQzKOCMAmoXr3T3G57CaazUvo_oCHpe-1wd4wduEyCcsNCMIYd1gq06B50KqjoCn5mb-IzafIhKqRg6iS7SxK1g_Vl3McwcM/w640-h360/DSC_6689.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhhfjS7HQ7vdvCkimI1DUKqiMOrmlriQB2h2XbpNqiCQH qO2gtJXXHFs21GGjruYaUbqgaPsZcCp9-Aq8Z93s8AYRoOSm0KQzKOCMAmoXr3T3G57CaazUvo_oCHpe-1wd4wduEyCcsNCMIYd1gq06B50KqjoCn5mb-IzafIhKqRg6iS7SxK1g_Vl3McwcM/s4032/DSC_6689.JPG)


https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhBdgGoACa_ZBlEfkySapDw0JxjKCNGZkizim40Mp3GF EvGjHX8_lfLGvapNAmyzLUQIzlvmPdlk_22XvWv2YqCsHzNGRE QXZ71ObjxSbmq-WTJn_b4GFsOLOvZ03Si3gGLnJxyEPApPHguaxF4wHdMVQkdXJ5 wxl9Jn9wyvzz_FZAsVrVQNlB80ACtfg/w640-h480/DSC_6687.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhBdgGoACa_ZBlEfkySapDw0JxjKCNGZkizim40Mp3GF EvGjHX8_lfLGvapNAmyzLUQIzlvmPdlk_22XvWv2YqCsHzNGRE QXZ71ObjxSbmq-WTJn_b4GFsOLOvZ03Si3gGLnJxyEPApPHguaxF4wHdMVQkdXJ5 wxl9Jn9wyvzz_FZAsVrVQNlB80ACtfg/s4032/DSC_6687.JPG)

It was yards to the football ground from there. York Road is amazingly the oldest football in continuous use by the same team, dating from 1871. Like the town around it, it is a hotch-potch, with low buildings, wooden huts, a couple of covered standing terraces, a more modern stand with seating, and a modern container-esque Alan Devonshire Suite, named after the Magpies long-standing current manager. But it has a certain charm about it and unusually for the National League these days there is no crowd segregation. Unfortunately though, the football was where it all went wrong for us away fans. It was a
nother disappointing performance by Town. Yes we should have had a penalty, and we piled on the pressure in the 2nd half, but we faffed about in the first half, kept giving the ball away, underlining once again that we are desperately short of a striker. It finished Maidenhead Utd 1, Town 0.




https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgbxcZ-D8gdU_WQEsoMmS3TYCU1E_c0njQTGkO5uW-NqOflPeNxnH_WpQ2Nw_tjy0adPoFXFrcunvTyixeOcc-LkLkh6CY2-qSZCQFUx6Nf0_pLYiUjZPVIybpYstob5fE43njw3DO7IYCTCcC aOZKkXPMnMAflCkFx_tZTLn2BErf24ygJnCMZeraPHzo/w640-h360/DSC_6730.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgbxcZ-D8gdU_WQEsoMmS3TYCU1E_c0njQTGkO5uW-NqOflPeNxnH_WpQ2Nw_tjy0adPoFXFrcunvTyixeOcc-LkLkh6CY2-qSZCQFUx6Nf0_pLYiUjZPVIybpYstob5fE43njw3DO7IYCTCcC aOZKkXPMnMAflCkFx_tZTLn2BErf24ygJnCMZeraPHzo/s4032/DSC_6730.JPG)

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgJBcvKaXZUNQ8j0QNE2d1lC6uAO8x1iqM9X1fD7K84Hf PxEp4bCmkIxhOK1-uP8LIZBfWostJpHmcX6Nc2WdF-ceQ751_LepSqnrPwqj8U-vj0o40-GuaWeW5Rqopppc4ykKJiUPVOGqm0SumAMO5qDatDlzoUuuD9mr FJK4gIcfaXkQp1mkmWx2UyM2g/w640-h360/DSC_6696.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgJBcvKaXZUNQ8j0QNE2d1lC6uAO8x1iqM9X1fD7K84Hf PxEp4bCmkIxhOK1-uP8LIZBfWostJpHmcX6Nc2WdF-ceQ751_LepSqnrPwqj8U-vj0o40-GuaWeW5Rqopppc4ykKJiUPVOGqm0SumAMO5qDatDlzoUuuD9mr FJK4gIcfaXkQp1mkmWx2UyM2g/s4032/DSC_6696.JPG)



Football over, we got checked in at the hotel, and 10 minutes later we reconvened and headed across the road to the railway station from where we caught the train to Windsor & Eton Central, having survived a changeover at Slough. Now having never been to Maidenhead, I had vague recollections of visiting Windsor a long, long time ago. We got off the train, went down the stops and spotted two brewery taprooms situated in the arches below the station, Two Flints and Indie Rabble (who I discovered subsequently are owned by the same people that have the Hoppy Places). But the quick route was blocked off, and once we had walked round a considerable block, we decided to go to another brewery tap that was in the Good Beer Guide, on an industrial estate on the other side of the railway arches, that of the Windsor & Eton Brewery.


The snappily-named Windsor & Eton Unit Four Brewery Tap sits in a unit deep within the Vansittart Industrial Estate in sight of the railway line. We arrived to find a pleasant bar which was already quite busy and with several of the empty tables having cards with reservations on for later in the evening it seems that this is a place to go on a weekend. The brewery was set up in 2010 by some former employees of Courage, who had a big site in nearby Reading, and was the first new brewery in Windsor for almost 80 years. Today they around brew 5,000 barrels a year so they are of a reasonable size, with their beers sold mainly in London and around the Thames Valley, with local deliveries around Windsor made using a traditional horse and dray. I ordered a pint of Guardsman bitter, a 4.2% traditional copper-coloured beer brewed with Maris Otter malt and Styrian Golding, Pilgrim, and Fuggles hops (NBSS 3). The quality was fine, but I found its bitter hop flavours and underlying sweetness not really to my taste. They seem to brew traditional styles but there were several keg lines on as well, so it seems they are moving with the times.



https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhURNSiNC_WtVL2DM_Ob9w8K5-s5lSvzp7Un9nszYkUxd6BZxXwIxD4Ujg5J31y2WG8AaHQBwt8l IaaYk6Uxx2Qb-gg6qooSTCCZloqOq371-Buj6_E7Cj1CZrO6fkHTku2yKNGE9fCxqCQwn6x3nK2LyjSo0px NT3KcXfCTuxuAaNRUB52rFRnzE2R8E4/w640-h360/DSC_6702.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhURNSiNC_WtVL2DM_Ob9w8K5-s5lSvzp7Un9nszYkUxd6BZxXwIxD4Ujg5J31y2WG8AaHQBwt8l IaaYk6Uxx2Qb-gg6qooSTCCZloqOq371-Buj6_E7Cj1CZrO6fkHTku2yKNGE9fCxqCQwn6x3nK2LyjSo0px NT3KcXfCTuxuAaNRUB52rFRnzE2R8E4/s4032/DSC_6702.JPG)

From there it was a few minutes to the original A Hoppy Place. Set in a former retail unit on a pleasant street, there was a welcoming glow from inside as we approached. The bar and bottle shop is smaller than the Maidenhead branch but I quite enjoyed its relaxed atmosphere, with several customers chatting with the guy behind the bar which is situated at the back of a long room. It falls into two sections, with an area at the front with several tables and a couple of fridges selling cans and bottles. There are no hand pumps, but a couple of cask beers are dispensed from a number of taps on the back wall along with 11 keg beers, all of which are displayed on LED screens in both sections of the bar. We went for one of the two cask beers, a 4.8% American Pale Ale called Wapaloosie, brewed by Leeds-based Tartarus Brewery and named after a mythical creature from North American folklore. It featured a little wheat and oats to soften the mouthfeel, cara and crystal malts, and Ella, Enigma, and Comet hops to give some big fruity flavours, and was the colour of pale mud. An interesting beer which is also gluten-free (NBSS 3).




https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiFX0EOwAhqV97SDUtyr7d9jVWMqOFoxuLc4Hf1tiEl1o bDTbvgnhPqPL0PZyPMdAsnpIrchNIUG0eUSVEdTXLs-h4Q8ikA0ZdFBcxr1D2M8Y6lG3fJPzFoNFVV33cTwXyFsAmMWMg emfGKzfVZc8UWmlnIwdoNDn33kQSkxSdKCePHJ4nwQPV1B3P3G OY/w640-h360/DSC_6708.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiFX0EOwAhqV97SDUtyr7d9jVWMqOFoxuLc4Hf1tiEl1o bDTbvgnhPqPL0PZyPMdAsnpIrchNIUG0eUSVEdTXLs-h4Q8ikA0ZdFBcxr1D2M8Y6lG3fJPzFoNFVV33cTwXyFsAmMWMg emfGKzfVZc8UWmlnIwdoNDn33kQSkxSdKCePHJ4nwQPV1B3P3G OY/s4032/DSC_6708.JPG)


The boys enjoying their Wapaloosies....







https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgoSQlU8OQZqbPOMTQLxFLewNEFymrZJsqMbTE2WdcGks 5agj76bBK9LCm7vOnrGW3XxOzi9_izL8IE6-krJndlcGRIkCU8yl1PeSZkXvrWpdlaeBbrCWRK30G53ZLMGrca MH81t2BeXPQMcfEMnWyrpIg7W_h-OVRgb-f___ADQsPKegMiyQ110v3ZCOw/w640-h414/DSC_6704~2.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgoSQlU8OQZqbPOMTQLxFLewNEFymrZJsqMbTE2WdcGks 5agj76bBK9LCm7vOnrGW3XxOzi9_izL8IE6-krJndlcGRIkCU8yl1PeSZkXvrWpdlaeBbrCWRK30G53ZLMGrca MH81t2BeXPQMcfEMnWyrpIg7W_h-OVRgb-f___ADQsPKegMiyQ110v3ZCOw/s3155/DSC_6704~2.JPG)

Moving on it was another few minutes to the next place. The Windsor Trooper is a traditional pub decorated in an attractive style with several old brewery mirrors adorning the walls, whilst adorning the bar were 5 hand pumps with cask beers featuring Adnams Southwold Bitter, Oakham Citra, plus three guest ales. I'd noticed beers on sale in one or two of the places we'd been from Stardust, whose beers I'd not encountered previously. There was one here too, called Easy Pale featuring Mosaic hops, so I gave it a try. This 3.8% pale was clean and refreshing, and it was just what my palate needed at this point of the day after a couple of rather chewy pints. One of the best beers of the day (NBSS 3.5), and in one of the best places we visited. A great atmosphere, friendly staff, and top-class beer - what's not too like?



https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgM2jhfVVvDL9v0hmHEo3zUOz0zb4sW0iE_GcJY-sVbJx-7wF_zfOms5uJqvzTE0JQOD2SLOm-N34b2ehXbarwi4C9ILHt91D48poC4j8VXbX6hlBkdto-RKsK42Uq1PCtFtg-OeFQoZWgTyUy27P0OLq4lSEEAvt28LXmNy4UGyI9SazLgqYqB3-UdMsI/w640-h360/DSC_6710.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgM2jhfVVvDL9v0hmHEo3zUOz0zb4sW0iE_GcJY-sVbJx-7wF_zfOms5uJqvzTE0JQOD2SLOm-N34b2ehXbarwi4C9ILHt91D48poC4j8VXbX6hlBkdto-RKsK42Uq1PCtFtg-OeFQoZWgTyUy27P0OLq4lSEEAvt28LXmNy4UGyI9SazLgqYqB3-UdMsI/s4032/DSC_6710.JPG)

Unfortunately the next place didn't do a lot for me. The Grade ll-listed Corner House had a bouncer on for starters, and whilst the guy was extremely polite and courteous it always puts me off. Inside it was busy and loud, with a crowd predominately comprising some of Windsor's young and beautiful things. Championship darts featured on two large TV screens, whilst surprisingly there was a total of 10 hand pumps on the bar, including beers from Tiny Rebel, Brew York, and Stardust. I went for a pint of Easy Pale, but this time it featured the Citra hop. It was ok but not as good as the last pint I'd had (NBSS 3). I just felt that the over-riding sports bar feel jarred with some of the places we'd visited earlier.


We then made our way into the heart of the old part of Windsor close to the castle where lurking amongst some attractive narrow streets and alleys was our final pub of the evening. The Carpenters Arms is a Nicholson's house which means you would expect it be attractively decorated and well-maintained and to sell their house beer, a pale ale brewed by St Austell, probably Doom Bar, and several more interesting guest beers. And, yes, it was like that, with much dark wood, glazed panels, tall brass-topped tables, and wooden barrels, with pictures of old Windsor and marching guardsmen on the wall. There were also some artefacts featuring the pubs former owners, Ashbys. The Nicholson's Pale Ale was pleasant enough (NBSS 3), and the atmosphere was chilled and quieter than the last place. A nice spot for the final pint of the evening.



https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgpPoQUiB954Tln95crgtPQwPY06-K6ddxfKT2dYBqpvPJD6ryFzCjn06FozXSIdD4x5ZCgNlhe42Vf LDRgmYKgPH-bAsLH_PGMOTePg6R7aE_7QjS2vtZG7oRd-kqH3d05MfDjekuF7JMKF_E48poBD1klOKtFMhSj6mQ-du2W86x3AXN8qUIjXapdR5Y/w640-h360/DSC_6724.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgpPoQUiB954Tln95crgtPQwPY06-K6ddxfKT2dYBqpvPJD6ryFzCjn06FozXSIdD4x5ZCgNlhe42Vf LDRgmYKgPH-bAsLH_PGMOTePg6R7aE_7QjS2vtZG7oRd-kqH3d05MfDjekuF7JMKF_E48poBD1klOKtFMhSj6mQ-du2W86x3AXN8qUIjXapdR5Y/s4032/DSC_6724.JPG)

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiXAuUqldWvBEdDh6U5vy0400XRhHgwDD5xN_lRl4qODf LCpqQu023sBaQWig7UQYuzUjoqC-3o35zBArqMcGSwN1Id6Igx63hOTINhowV-SCQnAHmWOdHlx7GmSgXW3i2Z8aATahz4reFDBLhnMnhvF5Vzvx-evABGWYEhKyCol5JcNNIqSIv_WbkB9y8/w400-h225/DSC_6725.JPG (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiXAuUqldWvBEdDh6U5vy0400XRhHgwDD5xN_lRl4qODf LCpqQu023sBaQWig7UQYuzUjoqC-3o35zBArqMcGSwN1Id6Igx63hOTINhowV-SCQnAHmWOdHlx7GmSgXW3i2Z8aATahz4reFDBLhnMnhvF5Vzvx-evABGWYEhKyCol5JcNNIqSIv_WbkB9y8/s4032/DSC_6725.JPG)

We walked down a busy street towards the river, the castle walls above us, and crossed the bridge over the Thames, where a few minutes later we arrived at Golden Curry, an Indian restaurant that had been suggested. Situated on a quiet road, it wasn't too busy and service was quick. The food was excellent, my seekh kebabs followed by chicken pathia with pilau rice and garlic nan washed down with a bottle of Cobra really hit the spot. We also received a complementary brandy and were then treated to some mind-boggling magic tricks by Amin, the restaurant's owner. It made for a splendid end to the evening's proceedings, before we got an Uber back over to Maidenhead and the hotel.


It had been an interesting day, ok the football and some of the beer hadn't lived up to expectations, but overall I'd enjoyed my day in this part of the world. And there's at least two new brewery taps waiting should I make a return trip to Windsor....



Follow me on twitter/X: @realalemusic (https://twitter.com/realalemusic)






























More... (https://chrisdyson55.blogspot.com/2023/11/a-maiden-visit.html)