QUARTERlife`s GUIDE TO THE PLACES TO
Transcription
QUARTERlife`s GUIDE TO THE PLACES TO
As featured in the summer 2013 issue of HUNGRy? Thirsty? Tired? Quarterlife’s guide to the places to eat, drink and stay in the Jewellery Quarter. JEWELLERY QUARTER www.jewelleryquarter.net Prepare your palate for a culinary guide to the Jewellery Quarter’s eating and drinking places, where you can see an award-winning celebrity chef in action, drink cocktails in a private booth, share a cuppa with a creative and dance the night away to live music. S now Hill station commuters have a handy pitstop tucked next door to the Livery Street entrance, with the independent coffee shop Brewsmiths. With door-stop bacon butties available all day, a range of specialist coffees, 30 leaf teas and a penchant for retro sweets and handmade cakes, this is a great place to refuel. local deliveries to businesses. This café is proud of its Jewellery Quarter location and names its breakfasts after gemstones! For a portion of crisp, golden, chips for only a £1 head to Gordon Blue café. After choosing from a great choice of freshly made sandwiches, salads and jacket potatoes at Lunchlines and Café Neo, you can eat lunch in Café Neo’s garden or alfresco in Golden Square, which is due to open spring 2014. Philpotts is popular with office workers around Great Charles Street who take away freshly made baguettes with big eat fillings like New York Deli – peppered pastrami, Emmental cheese, dill pickles, Dijon mustard and loads of coleslaw, or a tasty salad box with tzatziki. For a lunch with a view then Saint Caffe has a great location in St Paul’s Square overlooking the church. A chic, but not snobby, interior displaying work by local artists, there are big tables for meetings and cosy chairs for getting away from it all with lots of free local magazines to read. In the heart of the Jewellery Quarter, craftsmen and creatives rub shoulders at Hylton Café, Lunchlines and Café Neo. The bicycle propped up outside Hylton Café is a hint that they make 2 Brewsmiths Photo: Charles Davies For a more substantial start to the day there’s nothing better than a full English breakfast. Tiffany’s Café certainly agrees as their hearty servings demonstrate. If you eat breakfast on the run, then a sausage and egg sandwich from Pickwicks’ menu should keep you going until lunchtime. Birmingham has a large number of independent coffee shops that cater for the morning rush and meetings as well as a mid-afternoon boost. The floor to ceiling windows at the Urban Coffee Company make it easy for people watching. Inside the ‘Urbanistas’ serve connoisseurs with coffee blends from all over the world, breakfast or brunch. This coffee emporium is also licensed. The coffee lounge Fredericks looked over the pond to the USA for both design and menu inspiration. Their indoor and outdoor seating options offer a relaxed place that flows into the evenings as a bar with space that is good for private parties or events. Deli Heaven prides itself on homemade food freshly prepared each day. They serve a range of hot and cold sandwiches, panini, baguettes, jacket potatoes and salads. For an afternoon pick-me-up or break from shopping, the homeware store Pomegranate is an attractive airy, open plan coffee shop that also offers a 10% discount for students. This is the only gluten free specific café in the Quarter with a menu of sandwiches and cakes. D After a visit to the Museum of the Jewellery Quarter in Vyse Street, you can squeeze into the bijoux traditional tea shop at Vee’s Deli. A refreshing cup of tea or glass of cordial is perfect with one of Vee’s homemade cakes. You can also pick up store cupboard treats including the award-winning Lashford sausages that Birmingham is famous for and speciality Scotch eggs. The Brown Lion was refurbished last year, so it is a cosy nook to wind down in at the end of the day. Owned by the Two Towers Brewery, a full range of cask ales is available and you can book tours of the attached brewery. espite not being in the city centre, the Jewellery Quarter has a busy evening social scene as many business owners and employees live locally. From real ale and live music to cocktails and table football, the pubs in the Jewellery Quarter have a lot to offer. Quarterlife’s guide to the places to eat, drink and stay in the Jewellery Quarter. @JQDTBirmingham TWITTER FEED Followers of @JQDTBirmingham recommend their favourite places to eat and drink @steffi_j_b: @TheLordClifden for a stella burger, or @therectorybar for a fabulous cocktail #mojito @jimlucascbt: I love @urbancoffeeco for a decent cuppa & slice of cake @FrontPorchBBQ: The pork belly @RedLionUAB is amaze! Goats cheese and poached pear crouton @cucinarustica1 is the nuts! A ‘Sombrero Burger’ of flamegrilled chicken with sour cream and salsa, washed down with a selection of Belgian and Czech beers keeps customers returning to The Red Lion, or it could be their garden, quiz nights and friendly service. The Victorian stained glass windows give you an idea of how old The Jewellers Arms is. It is a popular meeting place so the benches outside are often full, especially as it is a dog friendly venue. There are no literary pretensions at The Shakespeare, just a well stocked cellar of real ales. The smoking area and patio are popular and, like many places in the Jewellery Quarter, this pub is a hidden gem just waiting to be discovered. The Queens Arms is an eye-catching, Grade II listed 19th century pub, with a magnificent art nouveau style tiled frontage. A CAMRA favourite, the cask ales are well received and the pub features a guest beer each month. Tasty treats on the menu include Edward Moon Proper Pie Company from Stratford upon Avon. Don’t let the resident ghost have a bite though! Fleet Street Kitchen H aving quenched your thirst, sate your appetite at one of the local eateries. Birmingham’s 200 restaurants dish up 27 different cuisines and in the Jewellery Quarter you can table hop your way through the best international flavours. With a bar upstairs and restaurant downstairs, at The Rectory you can enjoy an appetiser of chicken liver paté flavoured with Madeira, and slow cooked belly of pork with braised red cabbage, mashed potatoes, apple and prune compote and mustard grain sauce. The classically trained chef here creates satisfying, well-crafted food at reasonable prices. The Rectory Big Nanny’s is like a private supper club in the living room of its owner. The warm welcome is equally matched in the heat of Caribbean dishes. From the hot sauce on the saltfish fritters to the jerk chicken, you’ll find the short menu packed with recognisable Caribbean ingredients that are served with warmth and love. You could also try Ethiopian cuisine at Blue Nile who serve an exotically spicy mix of vegetables, slow-simmered meat or grain stews, and fresh meat sautés. The Jewellery Quarter now has two premier steakhouses, making the grill the star attraction of their restaurants. Anderson’s Bar & Grill is housed in eighteenth century cellars that are a cosy, intimate space to enjoy the locally sourced Aberdeen Angus beef, matured for 31 days to intensify the flavour. Newcomer Fleet Street Kitchen sets out to be a place where you can eat, drink and party. They have introduced Brummies to the barbacoa grill. Housed in a neat alcove alongside the main kitchen, the lumpwood charcoal grill flavours the 28-day aged Herefordshire or Quarterlife’s guide to the places to eat, drink and stay in the Jewellery Quarter. 3 35-day dry aged Dexter beef. If you like baby back ribs, with meat softly falling off the bone and a mini pot of the fruity house sauce, or a whole roasted chicken, then this is the place for you. The quartet of Italian restaurants in the Jewellery Quarter all have outdoor dining areas to indulge in antipasti right through to dolci. If you can’t decide between the variety of pasta at Cucina Rustica – Spaghetti con frutti di mare, Penne arrabbiata con salsiccia, Fagottini ripieni di cinghiale – then let the chef surprise you with a selection of three different pasta dishes. While you are deliberating over the menu, a dish of free olives is very welcome, as is the consistent cooking and accomplished service. At Locanta you’ll find the expected Chicken Parmagiana and Calamari Fritti, alongside Mediterranean inspired dishes like Don Paco’s Chilli Dish of prawns sautéed with chorizo, chicken, peppers, mushrooms and chilli tomato sauce. They regularly run wine nights, so check their website for details. Pasta di Piazza has a buzz that’s great for families. They are geared up for groups and offer a larger than average set menu of two course from £18.95 to three courses for £22.95. On a summer’s day there’s nothing better than an Amaretto ice cream and a glass of Verdicchio with its bouquet of pears and spritzy finish. About to celebrate their first birthday, the newest restaurant to join ‘la famiglia’ is Portofino. Their signature dish is Portofino Chicken stuffed with spinach, goat cheese and sun-dried tomatoes, with spicy Neapolitan sauce served with fresh ravioli. They host private events and welcome parties. At Gino, an Italian tapas restaurant and cocktail bar, guests can enjoy tapas and cocktails in a Mediterranean setting. At The Drop Forge nothing goes on the plate if it doesn’t taste fab. They are not interested in wacky techniques, for this Modern European restaurant it is all about careful sourcing of quality ingredients. The pared down menu of sharing plates, grilled steaks and gourmet burgers is well thought out, reasonably priced and updated seasonally. They have also won a design award for converting an industrial space into a hospitable bar and restaurant, with different seating areas both inside and out. Q uality is king for the restaurant owners in Birmingham. The city has four Michelin star chefs, more than any other city outside London, and the Jewellery Quarter is home to celebrity chef Aktar Islam. Macher jhol – pan fried fillet of bream resting on garlic scented tender leaf spinach and new potatoes simmered in spicy Bengali tomato and coriander scented broth won Lasan Gordon Ramsay’s F Word Best Local Restaurant. Aktar has set the standard for high quality Indian fusion dining in the city. This innovation has won over restaurant critics and customers alike so book in advance. Afghani Lamb 4 Quarterlife’s guide to the places to eat, drink and stay in the Jewellery Quarter. Taken from the Hindi word meaning history, the decadent interior of Itihaas takes its inspiration from the colonial and maharaja eras. Carved elephants, wall hangings and paintings set the scene, with immaculately laid tables and high backed chairs placed under black chandeliers. The menu however is bang up to date and dishes like the Karahi Maha Jingah – king prawns, panfried in a traditional Indian wok and marinated in a deep thick masala gravy that is unique to the karahi cooking style – has earned Itihaas the accolade of the British Curry Awards 2012 for Best Restaurant in the Midlands. Milan has been open for more than 20 years and is a modern space of leather seats, low lighting and fresh white linens. The friendly and attentive staff make this Indian restaurant a cut above. Their reasonably priced menu is very popular with groups and parties, as its location is close to the Holiday Inn Express on Lionel Street. The Rajdoot Tandoori claims to have introduced tandoori-style cooking to Europe in 1966. Their skilled chefs have been preparing traditional, authentic North Indian cuisine for over 40 years, cooking with Tandoori clay ovens. From a mild Bhuna Gosht of tender lamb spiced with capsicum and fenugreek to monkfish pan-fried in the chef ’s special masala sauce, there is something to tempt everyone. Henry’s is the only Cantonese restaurant in the Jewellery Quarter. This well established family owned restaurant serves more than 200 dishes to diners from their a la carte menu, Sunday buffet and Banquet menu (that also includes a free birthday cake). ‘Three Monks’ is a classic Henry’s dish. Monkfish served in three styles – deep fried with sweet Thai chilli, steamed with garlic soy sauce and stir fried with hot and spicy sauce. An advertising board on Warstone Lane is the only clue that you’ve found 24 Carat Bistro. An unimposing doorway (along from Big Nanny’s) The Jam House The king of the honky tonk piano Jools Holland opened The Jam House and its heritage as a lively, informal music venue lives on. leads into a snug café serving traditional fayre. Cottage pie, lasagne, meatballs and mixed grill are comforting menu staples. Due to the tiny venue, you have to ask for a key to visit the toilet which is situated opposite the café – it’s all part of the experience! When the daylight dims the lights go on in the Jewellery Quarter bars, for a stylish and entertaining evening. Getting glammed up is par for the course at Mechu. The downstairs bar has a dark, clubby vibe before you go upstairs to the nightclub. The mirror balls and VIP booths are a back drop to dancing until 2.30am. Thursday’s Minted is a popular weekly student night with a DJ playing motown, soul and funk. Next door is Après, the cherry red bar where pizzas are cooked in the wood fired ovens. Customers here relax by watching sport on the plasma screens or soaking up the sun on the terrace. The king of the honky tonk piano Jools Holland opened The Jam House and its heritage as a lively, informal music venue lives on. The bar, restaurant and club is spread out over three floors, providing a one-stop venue for a fun night out for more than 500 people at a time. Live music is also on the menu at the weekends in The Ropewalk pub, where kids can make their own tortillas to enjoy in the family friendly garden. Quarterlife’s guide to the places to eat, drink and stay in the Jewellery Quarter. 5 The tardis like space of Stirlings means that you can quaff wine on the outdoor terrace, sip cocktails served to you in a jam jar on the mezzanine, or down beers in the bar. In the lower ground floor is a spacious room for the Friday and Saturday DJs to spin old skool classics. Occupying the vaulted underpinnings of an imposing Victorian building, The Vaults has a classy wine and cocktail list to match their distinctive and upmarket home. Eleven vintages of champagne and mixologists keen to show off their skills have caught the attention of The Independent, who included The Vaults in its list of top 50 cocktail bars. With eight private booths to book, plus a bar and boutique restaurant serving modern British dishes, this is a bar that aims to please. Just one block up from The Vaults, Vertu has recently opened a smart new roof terrace. Open seven days a week, the bar hosts DJs and live music all weekend. Every day is happy hour or ‘good times’ as they like to call their special promotions of selected drinks for £2.50 from 4 – 8pm and five bottles of San Miguel for £10. The Actress & Bishop is not a quiet cosy pub for a tête à tête. Expect a loud venue packed with friendly people. Their comprehensive listing of comedy and quiz nights will fill your calendar throughout the year. Monday night’s quiz has a cash jackpot, weekend DJs and live music fill the dancefloor and a great atmosphere is guaranteed. The Lord Clifden is the daddy when it comes to blending superior food, drink and entertainment. Without using the word cool, hipsters definitely feel at home in the urban art bar or playing table football in the garden. Lots of guest beers and a killer jukebox also help. Now you’ve read all about the cafés, bars, restaurants and hotels in the Jewellery Quarter, here’s a handy map to help you plan a day trip or an evening out: 1 Brewsmiths 19 The Shakespeare 37 24 Carat Bistro 2 Tiffany’s Café 20 The Queens Arms 38 Mechu 3 Pickwicks 21 The Rectory 39 Aprés 4 Philpotts 22 Big Nanny’s 40 The Jam House 5 Saint Caffe 23 Blue Nile 41 The Ropewalk Livery Street Warstone Lane Newhall Street Great Charles Street St Paul’s Square 6 Hylton Café Hylton Street 7 Lunchlines The Big Peg 8 Café Neo Spencer Street 9 Gordon Blue Frederick Street 10 Pomegranate Warstone Lane 11 Vee’s Deli Vyse Street 12 Urban Coffee Company The Big Peg 13 Fredericks Frederick Street 14 Deli Heaven Caroline Street 15 Warstone Café Warstone Lane 16 The Brown Lion Hall Street 17 The Red Lion Warstone Lane 18 The Jewellers Arms Hockley Street Summer Row Newhall Street St Paul’s Square Warstone Lane Great Hampton Street 24 Anderson’s Bar & Grill Mary Ann Street Warstone Lane Summer Row Summer Row St Paul’s Square St Paul’s Square 42 Stirlings Ludgate Hill 43 The Vaults Newhall Place, Newhall Hill 25 Fleet Street Kitchen Fleet Street 26 Cucina Rustica Ludgate Hill 27 Locanta 44 Vertu Frederick Street 45 The Actress & Bishop Ludgate Hill Ludgate Hill 28 Pasta di Piazza 46 The Lord Clifden 29 Portofino 47 The Rose Brook Street Frederick Street 30 Gino Frederick Street 31 The Drop Forge Hockley Street 32 Lasan James Street 33 Itihaas Islington Gates 34 Milan Newhall Street 35 Rajdoot George Street 36 Henry’s St Paul’s Square Great Hampton Street Villa Tavern Warstone Lane 48 The Church Inn Great Hampton Street 49 Bloc Caroline Street 50 Hatters Livery Street 51 Holiday Inn Express Lionel Street 52 Travelodge Newhall Street 53 Comfort Zone Branston Street 54 Hampton by Hilton Continued on p8 6 Quarterlife’s guide to the places to eat, drink and stay in the Jewellery Quarter. Constitution Hill O N ET ST RE RD WA HO ET STRE YON KEN BO ET ST TA ET AT W Birmingham Bouldering Centre 24 ET Snow Hill Interchange RE St Paul’s Church O ST ER 1 AT W 45 42 LU D G AT Snow Hill Station E H ET RE ST EL N 34 ET 57 25 SUM 39 MER 19 ROW Comfort Zone University College Birmingham ST AY L ’W COLMORE BUSINESS DISTRICT AL Q ST LE AR 51 38 CH A4 4 S Holiday Inn Express ST RE ET UCB The Spa RE ET RE AT DE ST RE Birmingham Christian Centre L G RA T ET AL EL PA EE RE L O ET RE TT FL ST H N SAND PITS E ST ET EW O RE N BT Tower LI ST LO N AR 35 CH SL DE University College Birmingham Campus 33 NEWHALL SQUARE IL LI ST RG O Travelodge HILL M Birmingham Assay Office GE A N E ST HALL O 20 52 E NEW CA RE ET Maharaja Jassa Singh Ramgarhia Hall W 3 26 5 27 21 RN T For national and regional rail services, Metro and northwest bound bus services. 40 K ST RBSA Gallery O St Paul’s J A Gallery M ES S T 32 RE E T Consulate of Pakistan ST ET RE ST X CO RE ST PAUL’S SQUARE 41 Ramgarhia Sikh Temple 43 ND ET RE ET 23 EET LANE 1 RE ST O O W H RT N O Hatters Hostel BR STR GE 50 36 ET RE 28 TREE AM S GRAH Argent Centre LEG A4 ST D RE ST Y ST LL ST WO Stan’s Cafe HI ER ST LL HA AR M ICK 30 N St Paul’s D O NO RTH IO Hampton by Hilton ET Bloc Hotel The Asylum ET E ET RE DER 9 N UT ST 29 LI TIT RY CE Home to the country’sLlargest P A variety of specialist E N T jewellers REG as well as the Museum of the Jewellery Quarter, the Pen Room and BIAD School of Jewellery. EET FRE 13 R A ST R ST NT EGE ORI Frederick Street 44 49 Jewellery Quarter VITT BIAD School of Jewellery RE VE C14 AR O ST LI SQUARE NS 54 ET 47 17 GOLDEN TT ET 10 MO RE E 37 22 T GHAM S BU C K I N ST LAN CO JEWELLERY Warstone QUARTER Lane ST WAR ET N ET ONE ON S TRE ET TO RE 2 RE MP ST 16 KENY ST OR G E S S T R E E T HA ET A Information Centre GREA ET ET EE ST The Red Lion RE RE ST ST ST U Consulate General of India Jewellery Quarter Police Station 15 7 12 RE M College of Law R G Post Office ST HA GE ST CO N CE AU The Big Peg TT ST GEORGE ING RI PT O EN VYSE STREET Vyse Street MO CK EN AM 48 The Blue Orange Theatre SP Jewellery Quarter BU T HAM P H H RD St George’s Community Hub T H AT ST 8 A O RF EE TON RE AN 31 BR 18 G Museum of the Jewellery Quarter R ST ROW 22 ET 46 RE 11 6 City Centre BA 53 Quarterlife’s guide to the places to eat, drink and stay in the Jewellery Quarter. 7 RW IC K The team behind four other successful bars in the city gave The Rose Villa Tavern a contemporary makeover, to bring the grand old boozer bang up to date. The quirky design fuses an original phone box with the original stained glass windows and wall tiles. For any time of day the menu of American style breakfasts, gourmet sandwiches and burgers plus the traditional Sunday roasts is a winner. The cocktails blend classics with new inventions – anyone for a Chase Marmalade Vodka? The Church Inn is a block up from The Lord Clifden and reopened in May 2013 following a £500,000 makeover. Run by the owners of the Soul Food Project, this new pub promises a taste of the Deep South with their Cajun inspired menu, outdoor cinema on their roof terrace and a secret bar hidden within the refurbished building. F or a sleepover after a business meeting, or to make the weekend last longer, the boltholes in the Jewellery Quarter combine budget conscious options with design-led luxury. The concept for Bloc is that small can be beautiful and being competitively priced (from £45 a night) doesn’t mean that you have to forgo luxury. The Egyptian cotton bed linen and monsoon drench showers come as standard in this 73-room hotel. An additional 24 long-stay apartment rooms are planned. With rooms of one bed to twelve, Hatters tops the list for groups and partygoers. No longer the reserve of backpackers, the clean, cosy, safe en-suite rooms are managed by a team of knowledgeable staff who can recommend places to visit in the area. Stirlings Value for money and a convenient location is what you’d expect from the Holiday Inn Express brand, which also offers the additional benefits of secure car parking, complimentary continental breakfast and a day pass to LA Fitness. The 223-room hotel has decent sized rooms with the standard work space, modem point, pull-out sofa and power shower in the compact bathroom. Family rooms at Travelodge can sleep up to four people in this three star hotel. Built five years ago with 100 rooms, the modern, tidy rooms are well equipped for a good night’s sleep. If you prefer to do your own thing, then the three bedroomed self-service apartments with modern kitchens by Comfort Zone in Branston Street may suit you. The Quarter’s newest hotel, Hampton by Hilton, offers spacious contemporary bedrooms with free high-speed Internet access and Freeview on a flat screen TV. Guests can also enjoy the use of the gym and a complimentary breakfast. Bloc 8 Quarterlife’s guide to the places to eat, drink and stay in the Jewellery Quarter.