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Beer of the Week (w/e 5th May 2024) with Tris39 on the Pub Forum

Punch Bowl Inn, Richmond

Pub added by elizabeth mcgraw
B6270
Low Row
Postal town: Richmond
DL11 6PF

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Reviews (Current Rating Average: 6 of 10) Add Review see review guidelines


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Just a quick pint, then I'm off left this review about Punch Bowl Inn

Located in the small, elongated village of Low Row and set in a prime position overlooking Swaledale. With all the outside benches at the front taken, we were lucky to find a spot in the main bar / dining area (with another room used as a restaurant). Black Sheep and three beers from Yorkshire Dales Brewing - Swale Trail Pale, Askrigg Ale and Butter Tubs - were available from the four handpumps.

On 19th August 2021 - rating: 7
[User has posted 8117 recommendations about 8117 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Old Boots left this review about Punch Bowl Inn

A long thin pub mainly a restaurant but will cater for casual drinkers. Pleasant modern decor with lots to look at, including some mirrors made from church windows. There are three main rooms, a bar with dining tables, a smaller square room with dining tables with a small oil lamp on each making a change from tea lights and effing candles. At the end is a larger dining room. Four pulls serving decent but not outstanding Black Sheep, Theakstons, Bombardier and Rudgate. Nice views across Swaledale from the front drinking patio. Wittenden and Ale & Hearty have described the atmosphere correctly, like the CB it's mainly a restaurant and to prove it we got a service check from every member of staff when we ate there recently.

On 31st July 2016 - no rating submitted
[User has posted 3276 recommendations about 2982 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


. Wittenden left this review about Punch Bowl Inn

This pub has been a highlight in my wife’s family history, but had undergone a lengthy fallow period.We were pleased therefore to hear that it had been bought by the team behind the CB Inn in Arkengarthdale.Accordingly, we all went in for a meal.The food was fine, the welcome, and the fires cold.
We gave it a year and tried again. This time we came in for a pint early on a Friday evening: the fire was lit, but the welcome was chilly: something much more interesting was happening at the back of the bar. We weren’t planning to eat, but they didn’t know that.
There were a few couples in, but it was hardly thronged, and no local faces: a pub in such an isolated community such as Low Row should be at the heart of things.
The fixtures and fittings were beautifully made, and clearly no expense was spared in the refurbishment, but the place was soulless, like any trendy city bar.
I really wanted to like this pub, as I’ve heard so many tales of its heydays in the 60s and 70s. I very much doubt if dogs would be welcome, and the Riggwelter was average.

On 13th November 2010 - no rating submitted
[User has posted 283 recommendations about 282 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


aleand hearty left this review about Punch Bowl Inn

The Punch Bowl is a rugged, traditional stone building, over three floors. Dating from the 17th Century, it’s imposingly mounted on a bank, a short way back from the B6270. One half houses the highly regarded restaurant and the other half the bar.

The pub website describes the Inn as ‘contemporary and traditional’, however the balance definitely lies with the former. The bar is a long narrow room, with bare floorboards and walls that are half-panelled and half-plain. There are wall mounted sconce lights and racks of halogen spots. Plain wooden tables and chairs predominate, although there are several tub chairs at the far end, below the menu adorned mirror, next to the fire.

Unfortunately, it all felt rather sterile and cold, more inner-city wine bar than Dales pub. I’m afraid the coldness wasn’t just confined to the decor. On our visit there were four real ales: Theakson’s Best, Black Sheep Best, Landlord and Riggwelter. Although fresh tasting the serving temperature was way too cold, spoiling what was probably a decent pint.

Furthermore, the young (Dutch?) barman was far from welcoming. We called late Sunday afternoon and giving him the benefit of the doubt, he may have been frazzled from lunch service, but his supercilious manner certainly won him no friends.

After two drinks we cut short our visit and left, feeling more than a little bemused. As an unapologetic traditional pub hound, the whole feel of the place was just ‘wrong’, for me. Whist accepting that times have changed and acknowledging the importance of food these days to a pub’s survival, I can’t believe such an unsympathetic refurb was necessary.

Whilst visiting the gents I noticed the Molton Brown hand-wash next to the basin. No doubt the management perceived it as ‘a nice little touch’ but to me it encapsulated the misplaced ethos of the Punch Bowl. Such details as a warm welcome and beer at a decent temperature are far more important.

On 10th December 2009 - rating: 5
[User has posted 583 recommendations about 565 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Roger Button left this review about Punch Bowl Inn

This large 17th Century stone pub stands slightly elevated to one side of the main road to/from Reeth and is owned by the same people that run Charles Bathurst in nearby Arkengarthdale.

Whilst the emphasis is mainly on dining and accommodation, I didn’t find it to be place that feels awkward with drinkers/diners seemingly mingling with ease throughout the pub and there seemed to be plenty of space to disperse people throughout the pub without getting being intrusive on each other although, to be fair, it wasn’t particularly busy on my visit.

The pub was refurbished in 2006 after a lengthy closure and period of uncertainty as to its future although the modern surroundings may be a little off putting to pub traditionalists. Whislt not a fan of such drastic transformations, I feel that it has been done quite tastefully and they have retained a certain amount of character. Some of the furnishings were made in the workshop of Robert “Mouseman of Kilburn” Thompson and if you look hard enough you will find some well hidden carved mice, mainly in the bar stools and mirror frames.

The interior is divided into 3 sections with the main bar to the right hand side of the pub. The lighting was a bit on the bright side and the furnishings contained a fair number of sofa s and the like. A small central section contains local pictures of the surrounding area and a series of theatre posters whilst the larger main dining takes up the furthest end.
The 4 ales available were standard for the area (Black Sheep Best, Black Sheep Rigwelter, Timothy Taylor Landlord and Theakston Best) and the place could certainly benefit from a guest beer or two.

There was a decent mix of 60’s 70’s and 80’s music piped at a tolerable volume and free WiFi service is available, useful to know as we found that there were few places in the area that were laptop friendly. Service was friendly and efficient and the locals quite chatty.

It certainly isn’t a pub with the rustic Dales charm and internally it probably wouldn’t look too far out of place in a town centre but it filled a convenient hole in my schedule and I can think of no specifc reason not to pop in if passing.

On 7th November 2009 - rating: 6
[User has posted 1239 recommendations about 1233 pubs]