skip nav  
 


The New Inn at Coln, Coln St Aldwyns - pub details

Address: Coln St Aldwyns, Cirencester, Gloucestershire, GL7 5AN [map] [gmap]

Tel: 0871 951 1000 (ref 40789) - calls cost 10p per minute plus network extras

Work here? Claim this business

> Current user rating: 5.5/10 (rated by 4 users)
> Log in to rate this pub or upload a picture of it.
> Post a comment > Mail a friend


other pubs nearby:

Keepers Arms, Quenington (0.6 miles)

user reviews of the New Inn at Coln, Coln St Aldwyns

please note - reviews on this site are purely the opinion of site visitors, so don't take them too seriously.

Worth a visit on the walk from Bibury and had to return to the village as the Plough is closed on a Monday & Tuesday lunchtime. Food seems to be served every lunchtime and evening. Hooky bitter was fine but Bath Gem not to my taste.
Rocky53 - 27 Oct 2015 17:36
First came here almost thirty years ago when the manager/owner was Penny and the bloke whose name I cant remember but used to knock her about judging by the various facial bruises. Ah social history and alleged conjecture. Been here many times since and stayed equally as many. Its a lovely village - pub and food always very good. Back in the day they used to have a mock grockle cull - now the whole area is grockles. There, didn't take long to find something to moan about ;-) Seriously though, if you are in the area, visit this pub and try the walk to and from Bibury and stop off there at the Catherine Wheel - top pub.

Pip pip
on_the_brightside - 13 Sep 2012 22:24
An attractive, ivy covered pub in an idyllic Cotswold village, this has many of the ingredients to be the archetypical English country inn. In practice though, it somehow doesn�t quite make the mark. There�s nothing wrong with it, but it doesn�t have quite the relaxed rural charm and appeal that one might hope for.

The main bar has a red tiled floor and a beamed ceiling, although unusually all the beams are painted white, as is the ceiling, so you don�t particularly notice them. A large central chimney breast splits this room in two, and this had a wood burning stove in it. The rear half has an exposed stone wall on the left and another fireplace at the rear with a large coat of arms above it. This was mostly filled with tables and chairs, compared to a number of leather armchairs in the front half. The bar counter was fairly small and seemed to be the spot for locals to congregate. This made it pretty much impossible to actually get there for service, and this was not helped by the fact that there were bar stools provided for them to sit on.

Two smaller rooms at the front are more geared up for dining with wood strip flooring, burgundy and cream paintwork and upright cream and brown leather chairs. A pleasant looking beer garden completes the seating arrangements. Staff all seemed friendly and efficient, and we got a complimentary Elderflower Vodka and some �fizzy� chocolate truffles which was a nice touch.

The food menu is separate for the restaurant area and the bar, and priced accordingly. We ate in the restaurant where most of the mains were definitely restaurant prices at around the �15 - �20 mark, and offered a succinct, and unusual, selection of dishes � I�ve never come across a Peanut Butter Cr�me Br�l�e before! What we had was pretty decent though, if that�s what you�re looking for. I saw one punter in the bar being served Ham, Egg & Chips but didn�t check out what else was available on the bar menu.

Beers on tap were Old Hookey, Dorothy Goodbody�s Golden Ale and the somewhat off-putting Piddle although that turned out to be a decent enough pint, if somewhat on the warm side. The solitary cider was Stowford Press.
Blackthorn - 3 Apr 2012 22:15

got anything to say about this pub?

Please read our reviews policy before posting.
Only registered users can post reviews. Please log in. If you don't have an account yet, register here.