Tag: Rabble

2017 Award Winners In Full

DRAM Lifetime Achievement

Linda Johnston – Auchrannie Hotel & Resort

BII Customer Service Award

Atlantic Bar & Brasserie, Glasgow

Bright Signals Social Media Award

Highly Commended: Driftwood, Glasgow

Winner: Manorview Hotels & Leisure Group, Howwood

Critics’ Choice Casual Dining Award

The Swan In, Eaglesham

Diageo Social Responsibility & Community

The Clovenfords Hotel, Galashiels

Disaronno Cocktail Bar of the Year

The Bon Vivant, Edinburgh

DRAM Dog Friendly Pub of the Year

Saint Luke’s & The Winged Ox, Glasgow

Flow Entrepreneur of the Year 2017

Colin Blair – Buzzworks Holdings

Gordon & Macphail Award for Success

Bill Costley – Costley & Costley, Troon

Inverarity-Morton Wine by the Glass Award

Vroni’s, Glasgow

Kopparberg Independent Bar of the year

Bag O’Nails, Glasgow

Makar New Bar of the Year

Finsbay, Milngavie

Molson Coors Craft Beer Bar of the Year

Bier Halle, Glasgow

Open Ear Country Pub of the Year

Winner: The Old Mill Inn, Pitlochry

Highly Commended: Uplawmoor Hotel, Uplawmoor

Sunday Mail Pub Spy Pub of the Year

The Birds & Bees, Stirling

Scottish Bar and Pub Awards Renovation of the Year

Angels Hotel, Uddingston

Tennent’s Quality Award

Hamilton’s, Edinburgh

Wee DRAM Whisky Bar

The Keys, St Andrews

Wm Grant & Sons Bar Apprentice of the Year

James Marchant-Wink – Rabble, Edinburgh

Sunday Mail Pub of the Year

Saint Luke’s & The Winged Ox, Glasgow

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Sue Says: August 2017

Sue Says: Our editor Susan Young has her say on the industry this month.

This time of year it is all about the awards … and over the course of the last few weeks I have driven 1,000’s of miles. But I have loved every minute. It’s great seeing and experiencing new places and this year it has definitely been all been about the experience. It used to be that we were judging on quality of the drink, service, and welcome, toilets etc, but today so many bars do all the aforementioned and what it comes down in many instances is the whole experience. So a big thank you to all our mystery shoppers, our doggie judges and most of all to you guys who make it all worthwhile. Roll on the 15th August!

Sue Says

During the course of the last month I met the new 2017 Bar Apprentices who, this year for the first time, came under the tutelage of Wm Grant & Sons who have taken over the sponsorship of this category. What a great job they made of their inaugural course. And the feedback from the apprentices who came from all over Scotland and from establishments which ranged from Gleneagles Hotel to the Pot Still. Apprentices also came from AKVA, Boclair House, Lido, Scran & Scallie, Rabble, Crieff Hydro, Jute, Anchorline and Boda. I joined them for dinner at the Dowans Hotel in Aberlour and they were all in great form, as was Mark Thomson, Glenfiddich’s Brand Ambassador – who managed to blind taste/smell some 12 malt whiskies and nearly got a 100% score! No wonder he looks delighted.

Glasgow City Council have been trialling a new waste pick-up scheme which they say has been well-received by everyone they have surveyed. They have obviously not spoken to the same people I have! While licensees support the idea of not having bins at the front of premises, or in lanes, all day – the timings of pick up between 7am and 9am is simply not working. I work in Finnieston and I have never seen so much rubbish distributed all around the place. They say they have consulted businesses, well I’ve not been consulted and I don’t know anyone that has been consulted. If you are in Glasgow and have please get in touch. I get a FOI request coming up.

Duncan Frew from Badaboom, as all who know him will attest, is not exactly a shy and retiring person. But even he blushed when he and his team took part in the Red Bull Soapbox event at Alexandra Palace in London last month. The charity event saw them come in 43 out of 69, but it was the final crash that did it for the team. Duncan, wearing a kilt, crashed and he tumbled over – legs askance! You can guest the rest. Duncan said, “I nearly fainted…” So did the poor ladies on the receiving end!

TRNSMT Festival at Glasgow Green proved to be a great success. Could this partly be due to the fact that the organisers weren’t shy about issuing festival goers, beforehand, plenty of guidance about what was allowed, and what was not allowed! It was very clearn that there was a total Zero tolerance to drugs! As a result it seemed to go very smoothly. They have already announced next year’s event. The PR was certainly a far cry from last year’s reportage on T in the Park. Progress indeed. Well done.

Talking of festivals I can’t keep up with all the drinks ones on the go from Cocktail weekends, to Drinks Festivals, Gin Festivals and Whisky Festivals… it’s all about educating consumers and of course bar staff too.

The Giovanazzi family have sold their West End Restaurant La Parmigiana after 39 years. My family have had many special occasions there over the years not least and my brother celebrated his engagement there. Sandra has retired and his son decided to move onto other ventures. Now La Lanterna will open in its place… an end of an era, the beginning of a new one.

And finally… Sebastian Stanczyk of the Spiritualist who couldn’t get a visa to New York to enjoy his Brockman’s prize… is going after all thanks to a timely intervention from The Sun newspaper. Hallelujah.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Design Focus: Rabble

AnEdinburgh institution for nearly 20 years, Rick’s was a cocktail bar par excellence with a long list of regulars and a very well-regarded restaurant and hotel to boot.

It would take a bold man, then, to consider tinkering with such a winning formula, but that’s precisely what David Johnston – Development Director for the bar’s parent group Montpeliers – has done, relaunching the Frederick Street venue last month as Rabble.

The thinking behind the name? Well, Montpeliers like to be a little bit subtle, as they were with Rick’s, which was short for Frederick’s. That name and the new one were both inspired by the man the street takes its name from, Frederick Prince of Wales. ‘The rabble’ is the phrase Frederick and his 18th century contemporaries would have used to describe the common drinkers of the day. The son of King George II, Frederick was a noted raconteur and libertine who died young before he could succeed his father. In short, if he were somehow to be transported 260-odd years into the future, he’s exactly the sort of chap who would find himself very much at home in Rabble.

Rabble

Head along the right side of the sloping street in the capital’s New Town, step down the stairs and you’re ushered into a space that’s chic, spacious and welcoming all at once. Past visitors will immediately note the huge transformation the venue has undergone, the most notable change being the relocation of the main bar from the left side of the room to the centre, but there’s a lot more to it than that.

Rick’s was far from dingy, but Rabble is remarkably bright and well-lit, more than any subterranean space has a right to be. It’s an effect achieved via lighting – obviously – in addition to a colour scheme that blends whites and creams with greens and turquoises. Those colours are also present in the huge floor-to-ceiling wall of glass bottles that greet you on your left side when you enter. From the outside terrace to the main bar and the lightwell-illuminated space through the back, there is greenery in abundance, and the combined effect is almost enough to lull you into thinking you’re at a garden party. With leather seating and large umbrellas the terrace provides both comfort and shelter, but it’s the space at the rear, down beyond where the new Staropramen tank beer containers sit, that’s arguably the jewel in the crown, the natural light spilling over long dining tables, mosaic floor tiles and a wide white cabinet filled with more plants and bottles.

Rabble

Montpeliers engaged Jim Hamilton Design. Jim told DRAM, “The main objective was to completely transform the previous layout. The structures had been broken down into distinct areas – a front space, a back space, a middle space – and we wanted it to flow more. We talked early on about the menu and the tank beer and we wanted it to be very much about people watching, and for people to be comfortable dining at the bar. Often the bar is too high or too low, and we wanted to get the height right so that people could sit and eat. The bar has concrete slabs at the top and bottom and brass sandwiched in between. With the brass we went through lots of samples to make sure we got the particular polished finish we were after. As for the booth seating it’s almost like a leather saddle, and it’s deliberately open at the bottom to create space. ‘Rough luxe’ is essentially what we were aiming for, burnished brass in amongst plywood, things like that.”

Jim identifies raising the back room, which was previously accessed down some steps, and the creation of an island bar as the key strategic changes. He expanded, “We had to bring the back room screaming and kicking into the entire room, as I always thought it was a bit of a social misnomer.

“In the past reception was at the bar, which was revolutionary at the time, but it was negative as well as positive. How people deal with hotels has changed. I always thought it was imposing that when you were up at the bar you stared at the wall and turned your back on the space. People might not notice, but we’ve also moved the doors slightly so they’re nearer the centre of the axis. The overall goal was to give the place new life, and with that in mind we’ve also freshened up the rooms.”

The refurbishment is the embodiment of ‘Good to Great’, the corporate strategy adopted by David and Montpeliers last year in the wake of the mooted takeover by Revolution Bars falling through. (See page 14). And the transformation of Ricks into Rabble firmly draws a line under that awkward period, and also signifies a change of direction for the group.

Rabble

Rick’s was known for being a cocktail bar, but the new Rabble is going down a completely different route. Anyone with a passing interest in the bar trade knows that tank beer is the ‘in thing’ of the moment, but the team behind Rabble have put more rather than thought into their installation of the Staropramen tank than that. Research trips to the likes of Chicago and Denver, described by David as being ‘ten years ahead’ of where we’re at in the UK, have demonstrated that the potential of tank beer is best realised when combined with flavoursome food. Accordingly, rotisserie meats – prepared on apparatus specially imported from France – plays a big part on Rabble’s menu. Behind the bar the emphasis is more on quality than quantity, with the number of beers on tap having been trimmed down to ten – five permanent and five rotational.

David stresses that he wants Rabble to be known as a bar that happens to have rooms first and foremost, rather than a bar/hotel, his ideal being to recreate the feel of an old-fashioned coach inn where patrons could drop in for a meal and decide quite abruptly to stay the night. But will those patrons mind being referred to as ‘a rabble’? Well, if the food, drink and atmosphere are all as good as they look, they won’t care what you call them.

Tags: , , , , , , ,