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The Jamaica Wine House, Bank, EC3

St. Michaels Alley
EC3
EC3V 9DS
Phone: 02079296972

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


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Roger Button left this review about Jamaica Wine House

Secretive but historic pub tucked away down the City alleyways between Cornhill and Lombard Street. This was the site of London’s first Coffee House in 1652 but the original building was a victim of the Great Fire. Its successor stood until the current occupant of the site was built in the late 19th Century. It is a curious sandstone building that seems quite out of place squatted among the surrounding towers and office blocks.

Walking past, it is easy to dismiss as a pub, essentially due to its name, but it is actually a decent enough Shepherd Neame pub (a colleague of mine working in the area had fir many years avoided it on the assumption that it was strictly a wine bar). The deceptively large, bare floored interior is broken into four sections by high mahogany divides with a few pots and pans scattered around. It is quite dim inside and, despite the large arched windows, any natural light is somewhat filtered by being hemmed in by its towering neighbours.

The long bar offers 7 Hand pumps although just the 4 Sheps ales were available on my vist (Bishops Finger, Master Brew, Late Red and Spitfire). As one would expect, it is pricey but probably worth the extra few pennies to soak up the history and atmosphere of the place.

Naturally the place does get packed with City suits but out of peak hours it can be a fine and elegant refuge being limited to Sheps beers does take a point off the rating for me. That said, as one of the City’s more historic and interesting pubs it should certainly be high on the list of City pub tourists and just finding it will probably be enough to build up the required thirst.

On 1st February 2011 - rating: 7
[User has posted 1239 recommendations about 1233 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Malden man left this review about Jamaica Wine House

Formerly a coffee house built on the site of the original London coffee house, but renamed as the Wine House in the 1800's. An unusual building built of a kind of red sandstone, one reference I have describes it as Mansfield stone. The external suspended signs are worthy of note. Inside the bar is on an end wall continuous through four areas divided by dark wood partitions. The ornate ceiling is rather different, a section of it being of decorative glass tiles. All the dark wood and the partitioned layout make for a rather gloomy interior, not helped by the location at a junction of narrow lanes preventing much natural light. The front room however has some seating at a ledge in front of the large arched windows. Otherwise seating is at benches and stools. Behind the bar on a top shelf is a collection of jugs, pots, pewter plates and so on. Shepherd Neame beers, a few on, but I have to record that my pint of Early Bird was not in the greatest condition, nor cheap at £3.45. There is a fairly routine food menu with mains between £7-£9 and sandwiches around the £5-£6 mark.

On 1st June 2010 - rating: 6
[User has posted 1708 recommendations about 1681 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Rex Rattus left this review about Jamaica Wine House

This seems to me to be the same rambling warren of a pub that it was on my previous visit a few years ago. It’s now a Shepherd Neame house with the usual range on offer, except that I did not spot any Kent’s Best, although it might have been lurking in one of the other bars avoiding my notice. Anyway, I had the Late Red which was rather good and I think the best that SN have on offer at this time of the year. But it was at the City normal price of £3.40 a pint.
There are several interconnected room, with seating comprising mainly of hard wooden stools at the bars and ledges, with a few tables and chairs. It features in CAMRA’s “Inside Story” book about London pubs with historic interiors worthy of preservation, so expect to see lots of ancient dark mahogany panelling, and some tilework on the ceiling in the middle bar. It’s a City pub, with the clientele that you would expect in such a place, but it’s easily one of the better ones and was not overly crowded during my visit at 1.45 PM on a midweek lunchtime. I got served by a friendly young lady who seemed to be enjoying her job. As I quite enjoy drinking in these old pubs, and enjoy drinking SN ales, I expect I shall drop in for another pint some time.

On 25th November 2009 - rating: 7
[User has posted 2606 recommendations about 2520 pubs]

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