
April 2026. Royal Tunbridge Wells.

Two nights in T’Wells as we tick parents and Americans (patience !) in quick order, and on a Schorchio ! day I get a chance to see posh Kent out enjoying pubs in the sun. Perhaps.
Mrs RM has important things to do on her blog, so I leave her in the Russell to make a start in Mount Ephraim, perhaps the town’s loveliest quarter.

I mean, does your town have a milliners ?

No new pubs in Wells, despite a bit of craft excitement of late, so I’ll see how the George is doing.

I’d actually wanted to visit the Fonthill Tap in the stables, but that seems reserved for special occasions, and my visit is not a “special occasion”, remarkably.

The George is neat and tidy,

just a but upmarket for my tastes.

But having visited while I was DES driving the in-laws round, before (the Spencers all drink gin at lunchtime, it’s the law), I was keen to taste the in-house home brew properly.

It’s rare I choose the outside tables over a pub interior, the heat (no more than 20, but that’s a heatwave here) must be getting to me.
There’s a mixed crowd, the inevtable Older Dad with NYC cap and 3 schoolchildren the T Wells cliche.
“A Frenchman fell off my scooter last night” is as good as it gets. If I hear any more about his condition I’ll update you.

The Fonthill Creedence is a curate’s egg, malty and resinous and overpowering, and with questionable detritus floating at the bottom (probably spa water from the Pantiles),

but despite all that it’s a tasty, well-conditioned pint (NBSS 3.5). Better than a curate’s egg, anyway.
Is the dog in the first picture alive?
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That’s what an NBSS 2 pint does to you.
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Does your town have a milliners ? – Yes it’s Caroline Morris Millinery in the Kings Road. Excellent shops there including a fishmonger and butcher.
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Jon, I noticed last week that Whitby has more than its fair share of fishmongers.
Probably no milliners though.
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We have Hat Man under the Birmingham ramp. Not sure if this one counts.
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I remember a pint of Tolly Cobbold c1970, one of my first ever, which had things resembling white peppercorns at the bottom. My older – I hesitate to say wiser – brother reassured me that they were “hops”…
That was at the Fox, Newbourne.
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Etu, I remember a Stafford pub with the same landlord since 1939 where the Ansells Bitter always had white bits at the bottom of the glass, probably yeast that had been growing inside lines that were never cleaned.
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