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The Crossed Peels (JD Wetherspoon), Stirling
Stirling
FK8 1AT
Pub Type
J D WetherspoonReviews (Current Rating Average: 6 of 10) see review guidelines
Old Boots left this review about The Crossed Peels (JD Wetherspoon)
Small fairly standard spoons, it does boast a nice carved architectural counter. Standard seating layout with tall tables near the counter and low seating away from it. Six pumps in two banks of three, the more interesting beers were on the set nearest the (Baker St) front door; Jaipur, Theakston XB and Portabello APA; the usual suspects on the other set. There’s an open kitchen area at the back, a couple of machines at the bottom of the stairs and a single screen, oddly it has a dart board in one corner. There is also a wheelchair lift. A bit quiet on a Saturday night, a few older bods but mostly youngsters. Upstairs are the toilets and an enclosed bar with its own counter, six pulls with a slightly different range to downstairs, this bar was more popular and busier than downstairs. WhatPub says the upper floor has an entrance onto Spittal St, while downstairs with what I assumed to be the main entrance is on Baker St.
On 26th May 2025
- no rating submitted
[User has posted 3655 recommendations about 3334 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Quinno _ left this review about The Crossed Peels (JD Wetherspoon)
Two floored modern JDW, a bit gloomy inside on a driech November afternoon. Rammed with punters (no spare tables!) and chronically understaffed. Three guest cask and my Oakham Winter Wisp salvaged an otherwise disappointing visit by being really good (NBSS 4).
On 29th January 2024
- rating: 6
[User has posted 5623 recommendations about 5604 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Pub SignMan left this review about The Crossed Peels (JD Wetherspoon)
Stirling’s contribution to the Wetherspoons empire, the Crossed Peels is a somewhat plain example of the chain with a large, fairly characterless single room interior. The servery has been positioned along the right-hand wall and has a traditional looking dark wood counter and bar back. As usual, high tables and padded stools are arranged in a row opposite the bar whilst more conventional tables and chairs have been used to fill the rest of the carpeted room. Low wood panelling covers the majority of the walls whilst the upper sections have been painted in quite bright shades. A few arty prints and the usual ‘Spoons local-info boards help provide a little visual distraction and there was the rare sight of a dartboard over in the rear left corner. The pub’s focal point is a nice centrally positioned fireplace which the lone barmaid continually stoked and replenished throughout my time here. It was certainly popular, with around half of the customers crowded around it on an admittedly very quiet Monday afternoon. Stairs lead up to a nicely appointed first floor seating area with loads more standard tables and chairs and a patio garden area of sorts. There was a dumb waiter on the back wall of the ground floor room that was constantly bleeping, which I found incredibly annoying given that there wasn’t enough ambient noise in the room to drown it out.
The beer selection was pretty weak, with two ‘Spoons regulars supplemented by just the two guest ales, whilst two further handpulls went unclipped. I tried something called Tamara Best Bitter, which was a fairly non-descript brew that seemed highly appropriate in this rather bland pub.
I don’t think I’ve ever visited a Wetherspoons as quiet as this place – even the arrival of a loud, local ‘character’ failed to spark the place into life and he soon piped down and quietly supped his beer like the rest of us. Stirling’s pub scene isn’t the most exciting and that is perhaps best reflected in its uninspiring Wetherspoons.
On 20th March 2018
- rating: 5
[User has posted 3361 recommendations about 3361 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Will Larter left this review about The Crossed Peels (JD Wetherspoon)
I wouldn't normally bother with a Spoons, but we had half an hour to kill before the Settle Inn was due to open, so I thought we might as well. The ale range was pretty limited, with two banks of five hand pumps: Doom Bar and Abbot doubled up, one beer "coming soon" and a couple of guests. We had Loddon Hullabaloo Best Bitter, which was not in very good condition. The designers have done their best with the available space in this glass and steel box of a building, so why is the beer apparantly an afterthought in terms of quality, and brought ridiculous distances from Cornwall, Suffolk and Oxfordshire when there is fantastic beer brewed in Scotland?
On 24th March 2017
- rating: 5
[User has posted 4373 recommendations about 4020 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Just a quick pint, then I'm off left this review about The Crossed Peels (JD Wetherspoon)
Unremarkable spoons housed in a dull modern building that doesn't really fit with Stirling's historic streetscape. The semi-modern interior of the lower bar benefits from a ceiling that is a bit higher than most, together with a few information panels and a old-fashioned Scottish water tap on the counter, but that's about it. The upper bar is larger and slightly more traditional, and there is also a patio beer garden beside the back entrance. Modest selection from the two banks of three handpumps on the lower bar, with the 'North Brink' (Elgood's) Indian Summer (£2.49) having the most appealing name (with the hand-written chalk-board 'clips' otherwise anonymising things). Up to 12 real ales available upstairs.
On 15th October 2016
- rating: 6
[User has posted 8733 recommendations about 8733 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Aqualung . left this review about The Crossed Peels (JD Wetherspoon)
As noted below this is a large Spoons on two levels which overlook different streets on the steep hill that Stirling is built upon. It has fairly typical fixtures and furnishings albeit looking a bit more modern than most.
I didn't take note of the beers downstairs as I spotted that they had a festival cider that I hadn't tried upstairs. The beer choice here was poor with one unused, four available soon and just a Strathaven beer and the International Alpha 5 from Banks's of interest. I'm fairly sure there were better things downstairs.
This is a fairly typical city centre Spoons.
On 19th July 2016
- rating: 6
[User has posted 2143 recommendations about 2143 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
David Ross left this review about The Crossed Peels (JD Wetherspoon)
Being a typical Wetherspoons pub, this is rather bland and characterless, but excellent value for money. I had a meal and a pint of Innis and Gunn’s lager for only £5.35 and there is the usual wide selection of other drinks on draught. These include Fosters, Carling, Carlsberg, Kronenbourg and Tuborg lagers, John Smith’s, Guinness and Strongbow, Stowford Press and Thatcher’s Gold ciders. Again typically for the chain, it‘s a huge place with lots of seating as well as standing room. It’s on two levels, with entrances at the front and back, both of which lead onto different streets, one street being higher than the other. The upper floor has a beer garden, although it’s really just a concreted area with plants rather than an actual garden.
On 19th April 2015
- rating: 7
[User has posted 769 recommendations about 683 pubs]