Name | ABV | Entered |
Titanic Steerage | 3.5% | 10/7/2021 |
62 Trad pub serving mainly Titanic beers on cask. Couple of guest handpulls also |
60 As others have said, 8 Titanic brews (just their standard range though) & a couple of reasonably unusual guests (new breweries to me, at least - Manning and Old Mill. Tidy old-style pub decor inside, the restaurant end is quite nice & therewas a pool table for the locals. Hidden away out the back is a pleasantly quiet and sheltered beer garden, where we sat. The staff were friendly & efficient, and the beer was in reasonable nick despite the best efforts of the sparklers on the taps. But the food was a big disappointment - my chilli was very average pub grub, but my wife’s prawn salad was absolutely tiny and came with sweet chilli sauce rather than the marie-rose in the menu. This rather put us off what might otherwise have been an OK pub. |
70 The place I first had my favourite beer - Titanic plum porter. |
60 Decent real ale pub with 10 hand pumps dispensing 8 Titanic brews and a couple of guests. Not a patch on the Buxton Tap House, but worth a visit. |
68 Fine old pub at the southern end of High Street, reached after a stroll in the sunshine through Buxton’s lovely park. A project William pub there are beers from Titanic, Everards and some guests from some of the more established breweries. Ably supported by the local community, worth a look. |
78 Great place, good atmosphere. Now a Titanic pub, great selection of their beers on tap. Few guest ales. |
62 Visited a few times in the past.
Decent ale and lagers on tap but all feels a little dated in its decor/ ambience.
Not somewhere I would go to enjoy a pint; more of a stop off. |
58 At the bottom end of the High Street and past a number of other pubs, this pubic house is located in a fine old building, although there’s only elements inside that compliment the ambiance of the stone brickwork. The decor is mostly wooden although modern in design with soft furnished furniture in a large open plan ground floor area all dimly lit given the low ceilings and old bay windows. There’s a wood burner in one corner which was still in use on the hottest day of the year. On this day all the locals using this pub were in the rear garden area, which is firstly an unattractive car park, but a fenced off area grassy area is found behind the barn building opposite the rear door - this is enclosed by the backs of terraced houses on two other sides. I visited this pub when it belonged to Everards and four of their ales were available as well as smooth on keg. There was a pool table and dance floor at one end of the pub. |
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