10:30 - 18 July 2002
If you travel along the bottom of Southgate Street
every day during rush hour you are likely to know
it mainly as a bottleneck. Traffic queues from
the lights near the Peel Centre at the top of
the Bristol Road all the way up to the roundabout
with Kimbrose Way and on down Commercial Road.
In both directions.
You are unlikely to peer out of your vehicle
window and think to yourself, 'that looks like
a good place to eat out' as you crawl past some
of its pubs, apart from, perhaps, when you pass
the rather fine looking Blossoms Chinese Restaurant.
But if you pull into the docks and venture back
out onto Southgate Street on foot, you might see
the road in a different light.
You don't need to go far to find good food. At
the entrance gates to the docks is The Tall Ship
public house.
On a Friday or Saturday night the pub is still
a popular drinking spot, offering the compulsory
loud music, pool table, bar football and big screen
entertainment.
But if you think that is all The Tall Ship offers
you will be missing what must easily be some of
the best seafood dishes in the city, certainly
better value than some much more expensive restaurants.
Seafood on the Docks, as the restaurant side
of the pub is called, will prepare and cook you
a lobster (pre-ordered with 24 hours notice),
crab claws and crevettes, shark steak, tuna steak,
sea bass, seafood risotto, fresh salmon fillet,
grey mullet, sea bream.
As I sat down at a table with my partner a rather
well spoken man from Bristol, who had come up
to see the docks with his wife, was loudly praising
the bar staff on his meal.
"Very, very good. Very good indeed. And
the sweets were something else. Good value too,"
he said, leaning back from a table scattered with
just finished dishes.
I half suspected he might be a plant, put there
by the management. Until I tasted the food for
myself that is.
My partner ordered half green lip mussels with
crusty bread (£4.50) for her starter and
I opted for the soup of the day (vegetable £2.50).
The soup also came with a thick slice of crusty,
fresh granary bread and was very nice. But it
was the mussels, which stole the prize for best
starter.
My main course, risotto of sea food (£5.95),
I had eaten before. This one was different, but
just as good. I was presented with a bowl three
quarters full of rice, whole tiger prawns, large
crab claws still stuffed with meat, prawns, mussels
still in their shells and chunky pieces of fish.
The salad contained fruit including water melon,
oranges and grapes and just in case this stomach
fill portion wasn't enough, another sizeable slice
of crusty bread and butter.
My partner's comfit of duck (£6.95) was
equally generous and tasty. A bed of baby new
potatoes, basted in garlic butter with an equally
appetising salad and, of course, a slice of crusty
bread.
We had no room left, unfortunately, for a pudding,
but I recommend the substantial pancake menu.
Like the seafood, another speciality of The Tall
Ship.
|