The floor of the pub is wooden but up ahead there is a carpet area with soft seating. The area was empty even though a screen with the match was in here. I sat down and looked around noting that this looks like a conservatory which has had the glass covered up, apart from a single sun light. All the furnishings are red (Chairs, walls etc). To my left were two middle age men playing and then discussing their chess match. They even brought the match back to a previous state after looking at a photo, and discussing what they could have done to change the outcome. There was memorabilia lining the top shelf on the wall from books to bottles to packaging and promo material. The pub had plenty of seating/stools and a clientele of old men and young lads.
There is a menu listing all the beers but my eye was caught by a can I seen on the wall. I'm not a fan of peanut butter but once I seen the Peanut Butter Milk Stout by TailGate I knew I that was what I was going to drink. The can was the standard 330ml and cost £5.90, even though the beer was only 5.8% but oh boy it was worth it once I tasted the beer. The beer has a peanut butter nose and the taste is spot on. It's a stout with a beautiful peanut butter taste, which pairs well.
The pub wasn't too busy and it was easy to find a seat. There was a table of 6 seating and a few individual drinking. When entering through the front door your side on to the bar and in the more dinning area seating. There are stalls placed around the bar for those that wish to sit there. The rear of the pub had bench seating with tables and a rug area in front of a fire with soft chairs. A hostel is also based above the pub, with the entrance door being just to the side of the snug area. The walls are white with photos placed around relating to trains. 2000's Indie music is playing lightly in the background and fits with the pubs style.
As I was relaxed and it was still raining outside I picked up the beer menu and scouted for another drink to have. I settled on a 355ml bottle of the Castaway IPA by Kona Brewery. It led with a citrus nose and a grapefruit and hoppy taste. The pub started to pick up a bit from the 10 that were in originally to 30+ who had all come in for the burger menu offered by Pub Love. I finished up my beer and visited the men's where another train photo was hanging.
I made my way out to the main road and to pub number 3, The Three Stags (SE1 7PZ) which is directly opposite the wonderful Imperial War Museum. The Three Stags is a Greene King pub which was very gastro. The entrance is on the corner and your faced with an L shaped bar. The pub is very open plan apart from in the right corner where there is a glass segmented area named Chaplin's Corner. Next to this there is some bench seating. Along the other wall there is a raised seating area. The floor is wooden with tiles around the bar and Chaplin's Corner.
The bar had three hand pumps, which surprisingly had no Greene King ales on. The lagers were more non-mainstream: Pravha, Staropramen, Guinness, Aspall Suffolk, London Lager, London Pale Ale, Cobra, Punk IPA and Noble. I went for a pint of Sir Titus from Saltaire brewery for £4.10 which smelt nice but tasted chalky. All the tables inside were taken, mainly due to a large group booking. There were benches outside which had coverings to protect from the rain, which were in use by people even though on a busy junction. I took a dry seat on the outside bench and forced the pint down.
The sun was back out which made the walk back to Waterloo station easy. On the walk back I passed the Duke of Sussex (SE1 7AY) which I hadn't been in for over 6 years, so it made total sense at this stage to stop for a swift half. The outside had a large covered seating area which was empty at this time. The building itself still has the Truman tiles on the outside and look pretty with the blue exterior and a red bench. I entered via the corner door and wasn't prepared for the way the pub had changed.
The first thing I noticed was that the two bar pub had become a one bar pub. The bar had been moved left on the back wall and the space on the right had been knocked through to create a single L shaped curved bar. The second thing to strike me was the strange/unique hand pumps used for dispensing the ales. 4 ales were on offer Wandle, Black Sheep, Sharps Atlantic and Truman's Bow Bells. The Kegs included Amstel, Heineken, Estrella, Guinness, Aspall Suffolk, Shipyard, Longhorn IPA and Yakima Red. I went for a half of Bow Bells for £2.15. The beer is named after the nursery rhyme Oranges and Lemons. The badge even had oranges and lemons on it though from the beer I only got a slight lemon taste.
There are no stalls in the bar, with seating round the corner being low tables and chairs, which were all occupied. Opposite the bar there was soft seating with accompanying tables, then a row of high tables in front. The floor is wood apart from a rug with some poofs near the entrance. The pub smelt of garlic pizza, which was certainly making me hungry. On the soft seating there looked to be a homeless man who had bought a half pint, which he a drunk a bit of and then fell asleep seated upright on the soft seating. Who can blame him, I think I would do that in his situation as well. The pub has certainly changed since I used to visit, but it had improved its interior and exterior, which is always a plus. I made my way back to Waterloo to meet up with the missus and make our way home.
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