The Pub du Vin is located in the former Sussex Arts Club building, which has been bought up by the Hotel du Vin next door, and done up into an extremely swanky bistro-pub venue with 11 guest rooms.
The concept - despite the slightly odd name - is to serve excellent food with a high class range of both beers and wines - good ales being 'the new wine'. I'm not sure about that, but there's no doubt they have an extraordinarily impressive range of ales.
Anyway, from the outside, the building is a beautifully restored Georgian town house, dating from the early 19th century, but inside it's all muted grey greens and wooden floors. The bar area has an astonishingly sculpted zinc bar, and the only let down is the trompe d'oeil decoration on the walls trying to look like brickwork: plain paper would have been nicer. There's a very impressive glass-domed function room at the rear which caters for parties of up to 80.
The lavatories (well, the Gent's at least) are equally impressive: mosaic floors, black and red marble urinal stalls and reproduction (or reclaimed) old-fashioned lavatory pans, with nice soft hand towels in a wicker basket - no yucky paper towels.
We didn't eat there, but the bar staff were exceptionally nice and helpful (clearly well trained), and the beer range (from six handpumps) equally impressive: on our visit they had: 1648's 'Ginger Not' and 'Winter Warrant'; Dark Star's 'Hophead' and 'American Old Pale Ale'; Harvey's 'Sussex Best Bitter' and 'Old Ale'. And they serve draught cider. Perfect. (And it was well kept, too).
The menu can be found on the web-site: for an up-market eatery, the prices don't seem too bad: starters from £4 to £6; mains from £10 to £15; and desserts at £5. Somewhere we'll have to try out at some point.
Two slight downers: they serve the beer in tankards, which I don't like - too gimmicky for me - but they will serve it in ordinary glasses if you ask. And, although there's a disabled lavatory, there is no wheelchair access to the venue.
On the whole, this is an interesting and welcome attempt to provide a modern, classy real-ale drinking joint. read more