Coat & Badge
Near Putney Bridge station, The River Thames & Wandsworth Park the Coat & Badge is a Geronimo pub with a garden serving brunch, real ales & pub food in Putney
The Coat & Badge | Geronimo inns pub in Putney, South West London
One look at this pub will be enough to tell you why it’s been a favourite with Putney locals for so many years.
Its laurel hedge encloses a delightful garden with cover enough to deal with the odd summer shower as well as a cosy inside where the welcome is as warm as the fireplace on a cold winter’s night.
Away from the madding crowds of Putney High St is the oasis of calm of the Coat and Badge.
The large, sunny garden hidden behind the laurel hedge envelopes you into our home.
It’s perfect for people watching, burgers, afternoons watching Sky sport on TV, or just as the entrance to the deliciously warm and lively pub.
Reviews and related sites
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An Icon restaurant review: May I take your coat, madam? | The ...
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The Dining Room at The Inn at ONU has all the hallmarks of a really good meal out: a comfortable atmosphere, good-tasting food, and excellent service.
• The Dinner Club menu gives you a two-course meal for a highly affordable $14.75 per person.
With the Dinner Club menu, you have your choice of soup du jour, salads or fruit (plus the obligatory bread basket) to start, followed by one of five main dishes.
I opted for the grilled salmon with tarragon buerre blanc (or herby butter, in layman's terms), with a twice-baked potato and Chef's choice vegetable blend.
The Inn serves dinner in the Dining Room on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights from 5-7 p.m. Plus, the piano in the foyer is not just for decoration.
Review: We Can't Sugar Coat the Bad News About Chicken ...
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2016’s Southern comfort food bubble has brought our city an ever-bigger bucket of fried chicken restaurants.
And, when I ordered the mac and cheese as a side with my fried dark-meat plate ($6 for two pieces), it got an unfortunate, clashing sweet kick from honey, too.
Yes, raw “oregano and vinegar honey” is drizzled over the finished chicken and splashed, unintentionally, across the sides too.
Opt for the pretty-good biscuits ($2) and perfectly fine mashed potatoes over the limp, pointless “sweet and salty” french fries, which continue Chicken Scratch’s weird trend of putting sweet things on foods that shouldn’t have them.
Chicken Scratch needs to rethink its fries, embrace bitter greens, hone the rotisserie skills and kill off the oregano vinegar honey, or serve it on the side.
From coat check to kitchen, Boston restaurants are rife with sexual ...
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A 2014 report from the advocacy group Restaurant Opportunities Center United found that 66 percent of female restaurant employees have been sexually harassed by managers.
Last month, the Times-Picayune reported that 25 women had experienced harassment while working for New Orleans’ Besh Restaurant Group, co-owned by celebrity chef John Besh, who has since stepped down.
A server recently accused Todd English — whose Olives and other restaurants were formative in the Boston dining scene — of sexual harassment as part of a complaint filed against New York’s Plaza Hotel, where the chef’s Todd English Food Hall is located.
“Of all the cases we do, we do more sexual harassment than anything else, and the restaurant industry is consistently one of the biggest offenders,” said the managing partner at Davis & Davis P.C., which specializes in family and employment law.
According to a report released last year by Restaurant Opportunities Centers United, women make up 52 percent of Boston restaurant workers, but 68 percent of its tipped employees and 71 percent of its servers.
Review: In 'Black Man in a White Coat,' a Doctor Navigates Bruising ...
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On one level the book is a straightforward memoir; on another it’s a thoughtful, painfully honest, multi-angled, constant self-interrogation about himself and about the health implications of being black in a country where blacks are more likely than other groups to suffer from, for instance, heart disease, diabetes, stroke, kidney failure and cancer.
And rarely have the authors of these books begun from such a position of sheltered naïveté as Dr. Tweedy.
Dr. Tweedy feels annoyed at the uneducated black patients who sabotage their health and then feels irritated at himself for his annoyance.
“It’s up to us, as doctors, to find the commonalities and respect the differences between us and our patients,” Dr. Tweedy writes.
Dr. Tweedy is rewarded when the patient ends the treatment by thanking him.
One Warm Coat | Collect coats to give to those in need, free of charge
Thanks to Sherri W. for sharing her Coat Drive experience with us!
My two oldest boys held a coat drive to help warm those in need in our community.