Drink At Home in Ottawa!

September 30, 2009 by rswain  
Filed under Nightlife, Uncategorized

If you can’t be bothered to go out for your nightlife, call 2-4 Beer & Liquor Delivery Service at 731-2337. Monday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 8:45 p.m. for liquor, and 9:45 p.m. for beer; Sundays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. for both.

Bars, Bars, Ottawa Bars

September 24, 2009 by rswain  
Filed under Nightlife, Uncategorized

Here are a few places off that beaten path that are worth dropping into. A charming secret in Little Italy is Pubwells (96 Preston St., 236-1175), a quiet working-class bar that features a fine selection of beer and spirits as well as some of the best pizza around, and a good weekend breakfast special. It’s my local, so I might be biased, but I doubt it. Another little spot is the Mad Cow Pub (1070 Bank St., 730-1020) in Old Ottawa South that has musicians performing various country and folk tunes on guitar (and their open-mike Wednesdays offer the usual combination of dreadful and extremely compelling). Still looking for the drink that once drove European artists mad? Well, your search stops here at the Absinthe Cafe Resto Bar (1208 Wellington St., 761-1138). The drink of choice for Oscar Wilde, Toulouse-Lautrec, Vincent Van Gogh, Edgar Allen Poe, and Charles Baudelaire, absinthe was banned in France in 1915, but was never outlawed in Canada.

In the heart of the market, the Empire Grill (47 Clarence St., 241-1343) is a good place to spend an afternoon on the patio with martinis, or enjoy some of the finest dining in the city. Don’t let the name fool you; buttless chaps and thigh-high boots are not required when drinking at Kinki (41 York St., 789-7559). If you can put up with the slightly self-conscious hipness, come check out the impressive Asian-fusion cuisine, including two-for-one sushi during happy hours (3-5 p.m., weekdays), and DJs as well as various live musicians from Wednesday to Saturday nights. If mixing dining and politics is more your bag, check out Parliament Pub (101 Sparks St., 563-0636), directly across from the Hill.

If you want to enjoy a martini while listening to a live DJ, the best and coolest place for both is at the Mercury Lounge, (56 Byward Market, upstairs, 789-5324). Or check out the Foundation (18B York St., 562-9331), in one of the few remaining (as they claim) “historically rich, heritage buildings.”
Otherwise, there’s Helsinki Lounge (15 George St., 241-2868), or the Aloha Room beneath Barrymore’s (323 Bank St., 233-0307), where you can get pints and hear the DJ spin tunes from your older brother’s record collection. You might even see some musicians hanging out from shows upstairs, or maybe Gord Downie from the Tragically Hip, just passing through town. Still, I prefer the lounge’s original name: Pete’s Nervous Onion.

If you’re in Corso Italia (Little Italy), check out the centre of all activity: Pub Italia (434&1/2 Preston St., 232-2326, ). “The world’s only Italian pub” (so they tell us), it features 165 distinctive beers from around the world (each with its own glass) with 34 taps, as well as food and ground coffee. Sit in the main section, which is their showcase Belgian pub, The Abbey, or on the outdoor patio.

For yummy blinis, good vodka, weird pickle plates, and intriguing ambience, go to Avant-Garde Bar & Gift Shop (135&1/2 Besserer St., 321-8908). Chosen in 2006 as the unofficial International Animation Film Festival drinking hole and meeting place, here you can get a variety of drinks and a bowl of munchables as you take in their heady decor, a mix of Russian constructivism and artwork inspired by Kandinski. They even play European music videos on the overhead television.

Located downstairs at 370 Elgin Street (231-2070), The Manx Pub is one of those friendly neighbourhood pubs you’d love to have close to where you live. Cornering the market on cool, the Manx Pub often sees the likes of musicians Kathleen Edwards, Jim Bryson, or Danny Michel on any given night, or writers Ken Babstock, John Metcalf, or Michael Winter. Even the staff is made up of writers and artists, including visual artist Andrew Farrell and poet David O’Meara, who hosts a reading series here on irregular Saturday afternoons. With a fine menu for lunch, weekend brunch, dinner, and appetizers, the Manx also offers a range of beers and scotch, as well as regular art shows and musical entertainment on Monday nights. But get there early, as this small venue fills up pretty quickly.