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:
New pub visits 2024 with Mobyduck on the Pub Forum

The Rook Taproom, Brighton

Pub added by Paul Brett
38 Dean Street
Brighton
BN1 3EG
Phone: 01273710624

Return to pub summary

Page: 1 2

Reviews (Current Rating Average: 7 of 10) Add Review see review guidelines


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Pub SignMan left this review about The Brighton Beer Dispensary

In the spring of 2014 the local Brighton Bier brewery teamed up with the Late Knights brewery of Penge to open this venue in the former Prince Albert pub. It's a fairly simple side-street pub that has been given a degree of 'craft beer' makeover, but I found it still retained enough of a traditional pub feel without succumbing entirely in the way you might expect to see in London for example. The servery is on the right hand side, presumably unchanged from its Prince Albert days, with a shelved bar back displaying an 'Ales, Wines and Ciders' legend across the top. Limited seating options are available, although there is a decent side room with standard tables and chairs and strange short partitioning features down one side. This area in turn leads out to a garden which wasn't explored on this visit, although there are one or two tables out on the front pavement.
The handpulls offered a 50/50 split of beers from the two founding breweries, with Brighton Bier The Grand and Thirty Three available alongside Late Knights Hop O' The Morning and Morning Glory. Four ciders were also available from handpull, which might help to explain the CAMRA certificate on the wall declaring them the Brighton Cider Pub of the Year for 2015. A strong keg range was available including beers from Oakham and other well respected micros.
I thought this was the kind of pub that will draw people in for the beer but doesn't quite do enough to appeal to a wider crowd. The place seems popular with the student and hipster population and it's good to see two promising breweries coming together to showcase their beers. I'd include this as part of a crawl of the local area but can't envisage a longer session in here.

On 12th July 2015 - rating: 7
[User has posted 3114 recommendations about 3114 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


paulof horsham left this review about The Brighton Beer Dispensary

This recently renamed pub is a joint venture between two breweries: Brighton Bier Company and Penge-based Late Knights. There are 8 handpumps, 4 for cider and the remainder shared between the sponsors. Further ale is gravity dispensed from jacketed casks within the customer area - I'm really not sure how easy it'll be to pour a pint from the bottom barrel when the pub is busy (and I hope the ale keeps cool). The beer line-up is completed by Windsor & Eton Republika lager and a couple of anonymous fonts, labelled 'light' & 'dark'. The identity is revealed when the beer's finished; a blackboard lists the previous mystery beers.

On my mid-afternoon visit, the customers were mainly supplied by the breweries, but they were all chatty and enthusiastic about the new pub. It won't take many people to fill the place up, as it's not a big room. Despite its proximity to the shopping mayhem of Western Road, Dean Street is sees few passers-by.

Worth a look-in if you're doing some shopping and a worthwhile add-on to a visit to Craft up the hill.

On 20th April 2014 - rating: 6
[User has posted 453 recommendations about 425 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Steve C left this review about Prince Arthur

I popped into the Prince Arthur last Monday evening at about 21:00 and found a quiet pub run by two friendly gentlemen. There is a seating area at the rear of the pub that I had no need to visit, but I got the feeling that it leads to an outside area. The bar is located at the front of the pub and is stocked Thatcher’s cider along with some standard draught products and one of the hand pumps was unused leaving Harvey’s Best as the ale option. There wasn’t much light as most of it came from the candles on the tables and there is no television, but some background music was playing. Food is served with the main dishes coming in between £9 and £13 and sandwiches that cost £5.

The décor is modern and there was a good atmosphere, but this is a place I’m more likely to revisit with the wife.

On 13th February 2012 - rating: 7
[User has posted 5267 recommendations about 5235 pubs]

Page: 1 2