Sunday, 1 September 2019

Cocktails at The Washhouse

This week I read The Violent Vol.1: Blood Like Tar, a gritty, urban graphic novel that I picked up for a quid or 2 at a Golden Orbit comic fair. It was worth it: it's entertaining, but hampered by a badly cliched criminal-drug-user-going-clean story and numerous plot holes (fingerprints not searched for, people not shot when lunging at someone holding a gun on them, etc.) I bought more on the day- I'm hoping they'll be better.

Went out for a friend's birthday to the stunningly unique Washhouse, a hidden bar disguised as a laundrette. We had a table booked so arrived and dialled the phone hung on the wall next to the 'washing machine' (actually a door to the hidden bar). The receiver asks how many 'items-' we told them the how many were in our group- and the door unlocked, allowing us through to the moodily lit bar. The bar itself is a handful of tables, and the serving area- there's no room for any more, but that adds to the appeal.

The cocktails are largely Manchester-themed, nodding to local musical talent or public figures. The Alan Turing cocktail came with a rainbow-coloured light-up display and padlock. Turing, renowned for cracking the Enigma code but later convicted on charges of homosexuality, is now regarded a hero in Manchester. His work shortened the war in Europe by more than two years and saved over 14 million lives (wiki), he has a statue in Sackville Park in The Gay Village, and part of the Manchester inner ring road is named after him.

I'm paraphrasing, but with each cocktail the barman would give a short speech about the concoction and its origins. Some contained pollen or honey, indicative of the cotton mills in the city, of which there were hundreds. The mills were compared to beehives, hubs of activity, the mill workers like worker bees.


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