Whenever
we visit the UK, we’ll eat out at several places and enjoy the food, whether
that’s Indian cuisine, Chinese, Italian or English. As a matter of course we
tend to frequent a couple of Wetherspoon pubs as well. Last year, we enjoyed
meals in Hampshire’s The Isambard Kingdom
Brunel in Portsmouth and The Star
in Gosport; while this year we went to The
Red Lion in Bedlington, Northumberland twice.
The
structural layout of any Wetherspoon pub will differ, depending on the original
building – a theatre, a nineteenth century office, a fire station or whatever.
The décor will tend to follow the chain’s furniture and fittings: usually dark
wood, though the walls will be adorned with framed pictures relevant to the
building and environs, often with snippets of history. All the pubs offer a very
wide choice of good quality food and drink.
Accompanied
by our friends we went to The Red Lion
for Fish Friday. This pub has stood facing the main street since 1902,
replacing an earlier inn of the same name; appropriately, perhaps, a police
station was next door for some time! J D Wetherspoon refurbished and opened it
in 2010.
The Red Lion, Bedlington
We
received a warm and cheerful welcome from Emma behind the bar.
The
routine throughout the chain is simple: select a table, note the number, and
select from the vast menu, and then go to the bar and supply the table number
and order.
The
choice is huge, but on this day the special deal is good value: fish, chips,
peas with a drink – all for £5.49. The drinks can be a standard wine, a real
ale pint or a soft drink. Each week there are ‘Guest’ real ales offered, besides
those on the menu. For dessert, we indulged in Eli’s salted caramel cheesecake
with ice cream and Cartmel sticky toffee pudding with custard (and ignored the
calorific values on the menu, since we were on holiday!)
Just
over a week later, we were drawn to The
Red Lion again, this time for a Sunday lunch (12 noon to 11pm). Emma
recognised us immediately, and we took her photograph.
Emma and steel Bedlington terrier
The choice entailed
roast turkey, topside of beef, roast chicken, hand-carved lamb rump, or
vegetarian wellington; all served with roast potatoes, Yorkshire pudding,
mashed potato, fresh vegetables and gravy; meat roasts accompanied by pork
chipolatas. Appropriate sauces are available – cranberry, horseradish, for
example. The meal comes with a drink (beer, wine, water, spirit, soft drink,
hot drink) – for £6.49. There are children’s Sunday roasts offered too for
£3.99.
Not wishing to pile on too many calories, here are the special meal events we didn’t attend: Mexican Monday, Tuesday Steak, Wednesday Chicken and Thursday Curry, all at good value.
The
menu is an A3-sized card, crammed with choice: salads, cheeses, smoked salmon,
pastas, noodles, scampi, nachos, grills, sausages, burgers, pork, chicken,
chilli, burritos, gammon, hot dogs, soup. Real ales include Devil’s Backbone,
Shipyard, Abbot Ale, Ruddles, plus ciders and lagers. Wines include Pinot
Grigio, Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay, Rosé, Merlot, Shiraz, Rioja, Prosecco and
Malbec, among others. If you’re not tippling, you can have soft drinks, Cappuccino
etc., filter coffee, tea or hot chocolate.
Breakfasts are served until 12 noon, and food is served until 11pm.
http://www.jdwetherspoon.co.uk/home/pubs/the-red-lion-bedlington
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