Pub entertainment in The South
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9:30 Blues Cafe
Run by a Delta born-and-raised man, this club carries on the Delta blues tradition in its juke-joint atmosphere replete with artifacts from the owner's family farm and local art. There's blues every night starting at 9:30pm, barring Sunday. The upstairs patio is quite nice.
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Gros Place
A popular spot set in an old service station where locals gather to shoot pool and quaff beer after beer. Stop by on a Friday evening and you’re likely to get a chance to sample some deep-fried turkey, which the proprietor cooks for the crowd.
reviewed
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Trappeze Pub
Those 'beer weirdos,' as one local put it, flock here to enjoy a choice of 35 beers on tap and 260 by the bottle, with bartenders who wax poetic about suds like sommeliers talk Château d'Yquem. The above-average pub menu takes full advantage of the stock – pulled pork marinated in Unibroue Ephemere? Don't mind if I do.
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A
Molly's at the Market
A young, bohemian hipster crowd swills the Guinness and mingles out onto the sidewalk.
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B
Whiskey Kitchen
In the Gulch, an up-and-coming patch of rehabbed warehouses adjacent to downtown, this neo-Southern gastropub with a mile-long whiskey menu is one of Nashville's trendiest spots. Expect crowds.
reviewed
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Jack of the Wood
This Celtic pub is a good place to bond with local 20- and 30-somethings over a bottle of organic ale.
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Holy Grale
One of Bardstown's newest and most interesting bars is housed in an old church, with a menu of funked-up pub grub (Scotch quail eggs, kimchee hot dogs) and a dozen rare German, Belgian and Japanese brews on tap.
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Closed for Business
Charleston's best beer selection and a raucous neighborhood pub vibe.
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Blind Tiger
A cozy and atmospheric dive, with stamped tin ceilings, a worn wood bar and good pub grub.
reviewed