Thursday, December 28, 2006

Beantown Musings

Boston offers a target-rich environment for the pub addict. The organization that funds my obsession through regular deposits on the 15th and 30th held its annual convention and tradeshow in Boston in early October and offered us another opportunity to explore the entry port of a extraordinary number of Irish immigrants during the latter half of the 19th century and the first part of the 20th. A few of the more entrepreneurial among the oft-maligned Irish-Americans established public houses that rival the best they had left behind. While few of the earliest establishments remain, their legacy is celebrated by scores of pubs scattered throughout the city. Purely in the interest of historic preservation, we patronized a few in the short week we were in town.

Sólás
Sólás, a lively Back Bay pub whose name means “comfort” in Irish, is nested along Boylston Street within a couple blocks of the Copley Square hotels. Since several of our affiliated organizations hold meetings here from time to time, I’ve adopted Sólás as kind of a home base when in Boston. On arriving in Boston early Friday afternoon, we dropped our bags in the room and headed over for a quick pint and a bite to eat. Sólás lives up to its name; the first floor pub is laid out like your family room, with fireplaces and cozy nooks. Sólás has been said to be a place that invites you in and asks you to stay. The staff is warm and friendly, and the drink menu is extensive. Food quality is excellent, although the service is -- at the same time -- prompt and slow. Don’t mistake the attention from the wait staff to mean that you will be getting something to eat soon. Not the place to come if you are in a rush, so get your order in and relax awhile. You’ll feel welcome and never feel rushed. I can recommend the Shepherd’s Pie. Herself leans toward the Ham & Cheese Toasties.

The Black Rose
On my first trip to Boston in the late ‘70s, I discovered the Black Rose and was introduced to draft Guinness for the first time. J,M&J, we created a monster. I started out with Black and Tans, but quickly asked to have the training wheels removed!


Veronica, yo , who hails from the Pacific Northwest, and Seamus, yo shared some calimari here in March and even got Britney, yo to try her first squid at that time. For an OSU Buckeye, she’s got spunk! This trip we stopped in for dinner on the one free night we had. This is one of the partiest pubs in Boston. Good Irish music, food, and Guinness! You can’t go wrong at the Black Rose.




Not certain who these attractive folks are, but they appear to be enjoying the craic at the Black Rose.



Hennessy’s
My first visit to Hennessy’s was six months prior to the Boston convention, when national and chapter staff come in ahead for a “look-see” – and some ostensible staff education. A group of our natstaff dined at Mamma Maria in the North End on the last night in town. Bailey, yo (see Alligators on a Party Barge under links) was severely under the weather, so she and the natstaff lightweights caught a cab back to the hotel. Not that B’yo can’t hold her own. She subsequently gave up a kidney, so we’ll cut her some slack on that trip. Veronica, yo, Britney, yo and Seamus, yo accompanied by the Russdog decided to extend the evening, so we stopped into Hennessy’s for a nightcap. The Russdog is constantly amazed at Seamus, yo’s uncanny knack for quickly zeroing in on the best pub around. What can I say? It’s a gift! The entertainment on the evening was a solitary folk-rocker, who covered a nice mix of Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, the Beatles, and Tiny Tim. With a few drinks, our group is pretty much self-entertained, so I think we enjoyed O’Whatshisname. As one thing frequently leads to another, the nightcap had a few friends, and we may have closed the place. On this occasion, herself and I decided that we hadn’t really had much of a chance to kick around Boston on our own. So with convention ended and no one else to tend to, we opted for a later shuttle back to DC and set off to walk part of the Freedom Trail. Full knowing we would pass at least a few pubs on the way, I promised her lunch in my favorite Boston pub. She knows by now that my favorite pub is the next one! We ended up walking by several pubs on our way, but I held off for Hennessy’s. Try the Traditional Irish Mixed Grill, a combination of Guinness-marinated steak tips, Irish sausages, Irish bacon, with baked beans thrown in to make it Boston.

The Kinsale Restaurant & Pub
The Kinsale is a recent addition to the Government Center complex. It sounded like it had possibilities when I searched online, but in person, it appeared like too many other formula Irish restaurants. We took a quick peek, but moved on. I’m put off by nouveau gourmet Irish dishes that look like a Jenga tournament winner.


Kennedy’s Irish Pub & Restaurant
When queried by herself how I even saw a pub that was two blocks off our path and over our left shoulder, I reassured her that I was a Guinness-seeking missile operating on autopilot. We only dropped in for a quick look around, as we had just finished off a hearty lunch at Hennessy’s and were heading back to the hotel to pick up our bags to return home. This one will have to wait for the next trip.
Slainte!!

Sunday, December 10, 2006

The Firkin & Fox--In Concourse C

I have to raise a glass the genius who decided to build a pub--even an English one--near the United gates in Washington Dulles Airport. For those of us who travel on business, lunch and dinner are too often airport fast food (even worse than regular fast food) eaten in the waiting area next to the departure gate for our next flight. Having returned from Memphis late the previous evening, The Missus Seamus, yo and I were heading back to Nashville for the weekend. Fearing long lines at security on a Friday evening, we passed up the few dinner choices available on the back route from Fredneck, hustled through check-in, breezed through security -- love those premium security lines -- and endured the people-crawlers out to the C-gates. At this point, we still had a hour before boarding, but I figured we were destined for the epicurean delights of McNasty's or Nate's Pizza Express.
Begorrah!! Guess it had been a few months since I departed from the mid-section of C Concourse. In their entrepreneurial foresight, someone finally figured out that they could make a bit of dosh by offering some only moderately overpriced pub grub and real beer -- you know, the kind you can chew -- between the TSA and the jetway. Bless their capitalist hearts!

The Firkin & Fox is a right lovely pub sandwiched in among the vendor carts and fast food stand-me-ups. Not only do they offer a place to sit down to a bite and a beer, the food is tasty and the atmosphere is, well, pub-like. M'lady ordered the fish'n'chips, and m'self settled on the bangers and mash, both washed down with a smitticks. For an English pub, the Smithwyck's ale was almost creamy, and the fare was the best I've had in an airport in over a hundred thousand miles.
So to the people who have created Firkin & Fox and improved Dulles International many times over, "Cead Mille Failte", a 100,000 welcomes!

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Silver Sprung

While generally supporting the effort to create authentic Irish pubs around the globe, I'm a little put off by attempts to create illusions of authenticity in new shopping malls. Unfortunately , McGinty's Public House in downtown Silver Spring, MD is such an example. On the positive side, the establishment pours a decent pint of stout. Since friends who ought to know have suggested for some time that we should give the new pub a go, we arrived with high expectations--perhaps too high.

The best pubs make you feel welcome from the time you walk in the door, and feeling like you're family by the time the evening is over. Afraid McGinty's is found wanting in the hospitality category. We entered from the sidewalk entrance early enough on Saturday night that the place was busy but not overcrowded. The entrance brings you into the pub room on the lower level where you may or may not be greeted by a host or someone from the wait staff. After a brief time, a hostess appeared, took our measure and a quick look around the room, and suggested we should try upstairs, pointing--not leading-- to the staircase.

Expecting to find another host station upstairs, we were not disappointed, unless you consider that after about five minutes we interrupted a busser scurrying by to ask if there was anyone tending the station. A couple minutes more and someone appeared to find us a smallish table in the upstairs dining room.

The decor was somewhat reminiscent of pubs and restaurants we had visited in Ireland, but the beamed suspended ceiling and thatched roof simulation looked like a amateurish attempt to imitate an authentic reproduction.

To make a long story bearable, the drinks were adequate and the food less so. I'm a great fan of lamb and hoped for lamb stew on the evening, but none was to be found. So I tried the grilled lamb chops, which proved to be closer to mutton than lamb.

Suggest you give this one a pass. We won't be back.

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

An Irish Rose By Any Other Name ...

Another Wednesday night, another pub in another town! This time it's in northern Illinois. My workshop co-leader Meg and I flew into O'Hare this afternoon to put on a marketing workshop in Rockford on Thursday. Neither of us had eaten any lunch before departing Dulles, so we were looking for an early dinner along I-90 between Chicago and Rockford. Before leaving Bethesda, I had googled the Irish pubs in Rockford and had decided on trying the Irish Rose Saloon for a pint later in the evening. Thinking we'd like to get a bite sooner than later, we pulled off the Interstate shortly after departing the airport. However, all the eateries around the exit appeared to be the usual chain restaurants that the Midwest is lousy with these days. As we were looking for something a little funkier with a bit of charm all its own, we determined to push on.

The Irish Rose Saloon is a delightful pub in what appears to be the historic section of Rockford. The restaurant had a good dinnner crowd at six o'clock on a Wednesday night, and the fare was tasty and the presentation attractive. The menu offered variety, but showed more Midwest than Irish in its influence. The beer selection was fairly extensive with a good mix of domestic and import brands, but the Guinness proved a little disappointing--a little too chilled and lacking the creaminess characteristic of a perfect pint. However, the wait staff was friendly and attentive and the overall experience still quite enjoyable.

All in all, everything worked together resulting in a pleasant evening in a friendly pub. And that's all I really asked for!

Friday, October 27, 2006

In search of The Holy Grail

I've been quite remiss in posting since initiating the blog a couple months ago, but tonight's experience is going to change all that, hopefully on a permanent basis.

A couple years back I revisited O'Reilly's Pub on Green Street in North Beach, San Francisco looking to confirm my earlier experience. In all my travels and at least four score and seven pubs, I had yet to find a lamb stew that challenged the reigning champion. As it was a weekday evening, the dining room of the pub was uncrowded. I enjoyed dinner and a few pints at a quiet table in earshot of the only other occupants. I couldn't help but overhear -- actually, I could have probably helped it -- as they discussed the acquisition of an old building near the Civic Center, and plans to restore the building to its former grandeur and open an oyster house.

Although I experienced a few minor pangs of guilt at eavesdropping, I was enjoying the character study presented by their discourse. The age difference between the men created the impression of a younger entrepreneur and his older, more experienced mentor. Because I had already sampled the Oysters O'Reilly on the menu, I suspected that the younger man was the proprietor of the establishment, and that the new venture had at least a reasonable chance for success. Without any pressing engagements for the evening, I ordered the one dessert that I can rarely pass up, the Irish bread pudding with whiskey sauce.

While I finished gorging myself, the conversation ended and the younger man walked his friend to the door. As he passed back by my table, I inquired if he was the proprietor. "Yes, I'm Myles O'Reilly," said he. I introduced myself and explained my quest for the best lamb stew in the country. I told him, "After extensive research, I had to come back and see if yours is still the best -- and it is!" Myles told me that it was his mother's recipe and offered that the secret was the fresh-squeezed orange juice. While he may well have spoken the truth, it occurred to me that the Dublin native may have kissed the Blarney stone a time or two. Some three-quarters of an hour later, I left the pub with a full belly, a pleasant buzz, and a few O'Reilly's souvenirs given me by my new Irish friend. "Ah, take this cap for y'self and a tam for the missus."

All of which brings us to today. Since none of my recent trips have brought me to San Francisco, I have had to follow the development and opening of O'Reilly's Holy Grail vicariously through the websites (http://www.oreillysirish.com/ and lately http://www.oreillysholygrail.com/). I've often longed to attend some of the special occasions and events that their email promotions have advertised. So today I finished the workshop I was leading in the early afternoon, and as is my practice, I jumped on the Web to find a Irish pub for the evening . None of the search results in the East Bay area captured my interest, but I did discover that my hotel was close to the Dublin/Pleasanton BART station. A forty-minute train ride and ten-minute walk brought me to the Holy Grail; that would be the pub, not the chalice. And the Holy Grail it proved to be! While the menu does not feature the regular object of my obsession (i.e., lamb stew), the grilled lamb chops and lamb sausage and cucumber yogurt were incredible. And the featured oysters perfectly complemented the perfect pours of Guinness. I'll have to develop a rating scale for my pub review, but today I found the benchmark against which, at least in the near term, all others will be measured. Congratulations to Myles on his great new restaurant and pub and to Chef Sean Canavan, who has talent rarely found in Irish cuisine. Enough to inspire this errant blogger to get of his bum and get to work. Slainte!

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Lamb Stew Pub Review

Lamb Stew Pub Review grew out of a hobby -- perhaps an obsession -- of mine. My work frequently takes me to various cities around the U.S., often arriving the day before a meeting or workshop, and I have to eat somewhere. As I often travel alone, I try to find a place that offers a some simple fare, reasonably-priced beer, maybe a little entertainment and friendly conversation--kind of like what I'd have at home if I were there. Such is the nature of an Irish pub!

So over the last several years, I've taken to collecting Irish pubs. At least one night in each city, I search out a local pub for dinner, a pint of plain, and a couple hours of kicking back. It beats the hell out of reality shows. So where does the lamb stew come in? When herself and I traveled to the ancestral home a few years back, I was alarmed at the sheer number of sheep that clearly appeared to be taking over the island. I pledged then and there that I would do what I could to keep the woolly beasts from overrunning the Guinness-consuming populace. So I've been eating the buggers as fast as I can ever since. Lamb chops, rack of lamb, lamb masala, lamb shank, even gyros! But my preference is traditional lamb stew, often called Irish stew, which some folks make with beef, but no Irishman worth his Jameson's would eat his milk cow.

Well then, to the purpose of this blog. As long as I was going to be in pubs all over the country anyway, I decided to focus my obsession on finding the best lamb stew in the country. Bailey, yo and Britney, yo (teammates in Alligators on a Party Barge) thought I should report on my quest and accompany my findings with pub reviews and photos of the best pubs from my travels. While most material will be original, I'll also use this space to share some great Irish lyrics, poems, toast, and blessings I discover along the way.

So, welcome to the Lamb Stew Pub Review. Slainte!