Jump to content

Recommended Posts

maxxi Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> and rows

> of warm baby mixers sitting in half an inch of

> water on a broken zinc cold shelf.


Where I come from, if another girl asked for a pineapple juice you knew she was difficult.

Jah Lush Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I don't want to stick the boot in but I felt once

> they got rid of certain key staff at least six

> months ago, staff, that new customers had become

> friendly with and also at the same time became

> regulars got on with, that was the death knell.

>

> Having said that I wish them well though it's not

> somewhere I've been in since the mid summer. ?4.40

> for a pint of Guinness. Get ta fcuk with ya. I

> just hope they can address the faults and turn

> things around.


xxxxxxxx


Guinness is ?4.35 a pint in The Actress, as I recently discovered.


Not far off The Patch's price.


Even in The excellent value Ivy House it's ?4 a pint :(


I was drinking Guinness in The Actress because for the first time I can remember there was no real ale on :( :( :(

Jah Lush Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I loathe The Actress. It is seriously vile. If you

> want to drink Guinness I suggest you go to The

> Castle where you'll be served the best pint of the

> black stuff in ED. And it's only ?3.50 a pint.


xxxxxxx


Well, each to their own. I quite like The Actress apart from their pizzas with very strange combinations of toppings.


Not knocking The Castle, far from it, I've spent happy evenings there (good jukebox for one thing) but I wouldn't go there just to get 50p off a pint of Guinness :)


The point I was making was that the Patch's price for Guinness wasn't very out of line with (most?) other pubs round here.

MrBen Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> http://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Restaurant_Review-g18

> 6338-d5960435-Reviews-The_Patch-London_England.htm

> l


Empty frozen roast potato and yorkshire pudding bags in the bin?


But the owner claimed that everything was freshly prepared? Well, that's not a lie. You prepare frozen stuff by taking it out of the bag and heating it up.


Has the Patch completely changed ownership, then? I thought only two thirds of it had gone? Is there nobody at all from the original team still there?


Sounds like they need to do something very urgently about the food if they're still charging those prices. I'd be spitting blood if I paid seventeen quid for a roast like a school dinner - but probably not from the meat. If anything like my school dinners, it would have been in the oven for years :))

"But the owner claimed that everything was freshly prepared? Well, that's not a lie. You prepare frozen stuff by taking it out of the bag and heating it up."


yup - drives me mad so many places do this.


Then again not many places promised as much as the Patch did

General point specifically not related to The Patch:


Whats the typical form when pubs die slowly - is it that you're down for the lease anyway so you may as well keep open and sell off as much stock as possible to minimise your losses? And to help further you can avoid "creditors" by going cash only? Hire a cheap chef and move to frozen stuff to sell on demand and make a small turn?


Or is it a garish coloured blackboard brought out the basement that says "2 for 1 cocktails all night long".


Seriously - i'm genuinely interested. The last incarnation of the Mag was open for months with just the same 4 customers per night and a chill in the air.

edcam Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> The place was rubbish when it reopened so gawd

> knows how bad it is now. Those tripadvisor

> reviews say it all really.



Some of the early reviews were quite glowing, to be fair.


Since I couldn't afford to eat there, I can't say whether or not they were accurate, or placed by friends of the owners. As that Masterchef chef was involved at the start, probably they were accurate.


Had a drink there once. The place was empty.

Seem to remember having serious doubts about the likelihood the place would last much more than 6 - 9 months.


There were more people on site while the cheap refurb was being carried out than has ever been ever

since it opened.


Did I not liken the pub bit as being like a dental surgery.


The hideous mural. ???


It's location is not ideal.

I don't think it viable to run any successful business from that location.

Even someone who knows what they are doing would fail.


DulwichFox

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Would wholeheartedly recommend Aria. Quality work, very responsive, lovely guy as well. 
    • A positive update from Southwark Council - “We are currently updating our Enforcement Policy and changes will allow for the issuing of civil penalties ranging from £175 to £300 for visible smoke emissions, replacing the previous reliance on criminal prosecution.“  
    • A solicitor is acting as the executor for our late Aunt's will.  He only communicates by letter which is greatly lengthening the process.  The vast majority of legal people deal by modern means - the Electronic Communications Act that allows for much, if not all of these means is now 25 years old.   Any views and advice out there? In fuller detail: The value of the estate is not high.  There are a number of beneficiaries including one in the US.  It has taken almost three years and there is no end in sight.  The estate (house) is now damp, mouldy and wall paper falling off the wall. The solicitor is hostile, has threatened beneficiaries the police (which would just waste the police's time), and will not engage constructively. He only communicates by letter.  These are poorly written, curt or even hostile, in a language from the middle of last century, he clearly is typing these himself probably on a type writer.  Of course with every letter he makes more money. We've taken the first steps to complain either through the ombudsman and/or the SRA.  We have taken legal advice a couple of times, which of course isn't cheap, and were told that his behaviour is shocking and we'd be in our right to have him removed through the courts. But.... we just want him to get on with executing the will, primarily selling the house. However he refuses to use any other form of communication but letter.  So writing to the beneficiary in the 'States can take a month to get a reply. And even in this country a week or more. Having worked with lawyers in the past I am aware that email, tele and video conferencing and even text and WhatApp are appropriate means for communication.  There could be an immediate response to his questions.   Help!        
    • Labour should be applauded for bringing in the Renter's Rights Act.  But so many of you are carried away with slagging them off. Married couples with busy lives sometimes forget who did what. On this occasion Mr Rachel Reeves was sorting out the rental agreement.  Ms Reeves was a bit flumoxed with all the grief/demonsing/witch hunts she is getting so forgot to check with her other half.   Not the first or last time this will happen with couples. (That's not having a go at the post above)
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...