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Holcombe Farmshop & Kitchen, Radstock

Pub added by elizabeth mcgraw
Edford Hill
Edford
Holcombe
Postal town: Radstock
BA3 5HQ

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Reviews (Current Rating Average: 5 of 10) Add Review see review guidelines


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Blackthorn _ left this review about Holcombe Farmshop & Kitchen

A traditional looking, stone-built pub just on the outskirts of the village, first impressions are when walking in to the pub are that you’ve actually walked in to a farm shop. No doubt because that is indeed what the front area of the pub is, with an array of wares for sale including loafs of bread, pasta, and so on, as well as their own range of jams and preserves. Oddly for an establishment that is also a pub, the ale and cider range was very poor with just a couple of mainstream beers and Thatcher’s Gold being available. I appreciate pubs have to diversify to survive, and this may perhaps be a worthwhile side-line, but as farm shops go, I thought it was pretty poor and not somewhere I’d take a detour to get to. Beyond this was a restaurant but it looked very much more like the sort of self-service café setup you might expect in a farm shop, rather than a normal pub restaurant.

The actual bar was off to the left of the farm shop, and although presumably recently renovated, it was not unattractive with a large open-apex roof at the end clad in rough wood panelling which also extended to some of the walls in a sort of parquet design. Elsewhere the walling was whitewashed brickwork with dark green wood panelling down below. Old flagstones were on much of the floor, and a pile of logs was stacked up next to a freestanding wood burning stove. A TV was mounted up in the corner, but fortunately this was not in use on our visit. Seating was a mixture of padded benches along the wall and high stools which were made from old milk churns that had been fitted with a tractor seat. A few random pictures were dotted around including a portrait of the Duke of Cumberland, which is presumably the duke that the pub takes it’s name from, although his connection to the local area was not divulged.

It was quite difficult to get to the bar with a line of punters taking up all the available space, and some of their language seemed rather at odds with the otherwise upmarket pretensions that the pub seemed to be trying to present. Beers on tap were Otter Amber and Butcombe Original, whilst ciders were well represented with Stan’s Traditional, Thatcher’s Gold, Inch’s Apple and Harry’s Blackcurrant & Raspberry dispensed from a box behind the bar counter. Overall, I suppose they’ve done a decent enough refurbishment job, but overall, I was quite disappointed with this and am unlikely to return.

On 5th September 2022 - rating: 5
[User has posted 1937 recommendations about 1850 pubs]