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Real
Ales on Tap:
Bazens Flatbac
Hook Norton Best
plus guest.
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Nearest
Accommodation:
Two Turnpike Cottages
Kirtlington, Oxford, OX5 3HB
(01869) 350706
S: £35, D: £25-£30 pp
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The pub lies on its own on the road between Middleton Stoney and Lower
Heyford. The landlord and landlady have worked hard to provide excellent service with good real ales and a wide range of food. This traditional pub is well worth a visit.
This Groom is a charming, thatched, 16th century freehouse, in a peaceful, rural setting, offers a wide selection of real ales (over 200 different ales annually) with locally brewed Hook Norton Best Bitter ever present.
A very special guest on this occasion was the Bazen Flatbac a brand new brewery.
The beers were well kept with or without sparkler and served to perfection. You
enter the pub at the front, though rear entrance is possible - there is a
small
conservatory at the front for sitting in the summer and autumn nights. Please
bend to enter the pub if you are tall, as I found out to my cost. The single bar
is to the right of entrance and can get busy especially when people sit on the
tall stools at it. Getting served is not a problem though as staff are attentive
as possible. There is also some seating here near the bar - square table and
chairs, but there is also the door to the toilets which on constant opening in
the winter can make sitting here cold. A seating area to the left of entrance is
right by the real fireplace - quite large and covered with pump clips testifying
to the guest ale choices of old. I did notice that because this area is small it
onlt took a few smokers to make it unbearable for others - pity really as this
is a great pub and needs a little more extraction at that end. To you right when
facing the fireplace is a seating area set aside mainly for meals which are
served lunch and evening - I would recommend booking in the evening as it can
get busy. An interesting and wide ranging menu is available seven days a week, served in the restaurant, bar or garden.
You have a choice from a Ia carte, daily specials (on the board by the
fireplace) or the specialty sausage menu offering 12 varieties of O'Hagan's sausages.
The choice for vegetarians is limited, but made up for by the quality of what is
on offer. The food was well presented and filling and at a reasonable price for
Oxfordshire. The Horse and Groom was voted ' Pub of the Year' 2000 & 2001 by North Oxfordshire CAMRA
and to my mind won on merit. An excellent pub well worth a short detour off the
M40 motorway
  
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