User name:

Password:

Login


Sign in with Facebook


Not already a member?
Join our community and - Rate & review pubs - Upload pictures - Add events JOIN for free NOW


Chat about:
Disappointment of the week with Mobyduck on the Pub Forum

The Hand & Flowers, Marlow

West Street
Marlow
SL7 2BP
Phone: 01628482277

Return to pub summary

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


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Blackthorn _ left this review about The Hand & Flowers

An attractive looking pub on the outskirts of town with plenty of hanging baskets and other colourful foliage, it’s run by celebrity chef Tom Kerridge and consequently food is very much the focus here and it is, I believe, the only pub in the country with two Michelin stars.

The front entrance from the road takes you directly in to the restaurant with a greeter there ready to take your reservation details. The side entrance from the car park leads in to the bar area, and this was quite contemporary and looks to be housed in a modern extension to the rear of the pub. It has an open vaulted ceiling with plenty of sturdy oak beams, a wood strip floor and a mixture of exposed brickwork and fresh white plaster on the walls. A tiny courtyard was off to the side, which is presumably provided primarily for smokers from the restaurant. A freestanding wood burning stove was in one corner with a flue leading up to the roof whilst the walls had a number of diagrams on showing the different cuts of meat from various farm animals. A shelf housed a collection of accolades that the chef had won, and there was also some rugby paraphernalia including a signed shirt and ball. Other random objects stuck on the walls included a giant pair of shoes and a hand grenade. The restaurant area at the front of the pub was much cosier and presumably was at one time the main lounge bar, with a low beamed ceiling, and a mixture of wood strip and slate style tiling on the floor.

As mentioned, the food offering is quite upmarket with most of the main courses being in the £35 - £40 range, so a step or two up from your normal “pub grub”. Even a bowl of (12) chips came in at £6.50. That said, you get what you pay for and we thoroughly enjoyed everything that we had. A smoked haddock and parmesan omelette for a starter was a particular highlight, being one of the best dishes I can remember having. Likewise a desert of milk toffee tart with old English spice and a grapefruit sorbet was perhaps an acquired taste, but I soon acquired it and found it too quite excellent. An amuse bouche of crispy whitebait was a nod to pub style food.

Beers on tap were Rebellion Zebedee, Abbott Ale, Old Speckled Hen and their own Hand & Flowers. The pump clips were pieces of slate with the beer name chalked on to them which was perhaps supposed to suggest a frequently changing selection, but since the same choices were printed in the menu I suspect that this is not actually the case. The solitary cider was Hazy Hog, which is a new one on me. In some way, this is a tricky one to mark. As a pub it’s nothing remarkable although still perfectly pleasant, but if you’re after some food then it’s very good and highly recommended.

On 18th August 2017 - rating: 7
[User has posted 1948 recommendations about 1861 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Quinno _ left this review about The Hand & Flowers

OK, we should have done research beforehand, but crawling is about is about tackling what’s put in front of you, right? Well, this one is basically not a pub. There’s a bar at the back of a multi-room interior. This bar area is actually quite pleasant, part of a conservatory-style extension, light and airy with upmarket soft furnishings. Four pumps with three on; Abbot, a rebadge GK house beer and Rebellion Zebedee. Like the Coach (same owner), there was an assumed tab and a “we’ll bring them over” from the bar staff. So we thought it was a bit pretentious but fair enough. So imagine our surprise to find on our receipt that we had been charged for the privilege! I put them right on that score quick enough but rather got the feeling that despite their claims to the contrary, this was occasional practice when they think they can get away with it. Inevitably the beer was skyrocketingly expensive though in good nick, a plus point at least. So unless you are an OCD completest, don’t bother with this one. Spend the time you save at Bourne End instead.

On 22nd April 2016 - rating: 2
[User has posted 5087 recommendations about 5070 pubs]