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Dublin's best pubs

Sorry, I'd like to tell you about the best pubs in , but I'm having some trouble reading my notes from those days and nights.
The City Of Dublin
Drinkers walk in the Temple Bar area in Dublin, Ireland.Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images file
/ Source: GolfNow.com

Sorry, I'd like to tell you about the best pubs in Dublin, but I'm having some trouble reading my notes from those days and nights.

Well, as the British - whom the Irish don't particularly like - would say, I'll keep a stiff upper lip and just get on with it.

You can't hit the golf courses near Dublin without visiting the pubs. It would be like going to Dublin and skipping St. Patrick's Cathedral or Christ Church, like going to Dublin without thoughts of James Joyce, the Easter Rising, the potato famine or the IRA in your head.

First, some general impressions:

I was initially disappointed with Irish pubs. They looked like American impersonations of Irish pubs - too clean, too bright, too expensive. I'd imagined malty aromas mixing with the smell of peat fires and rich, loamy soil amid the sound of boisterous Irishmen. Some of the Irish pubs I visited didn't have any Irishmen in them. And I never did see any peat.

Eventually it sunk in that Dublin, being the capital of the booming "Celtic Tiger," is as thoroughly modernized as or Tokyo. If you aren't careful you might find yourself trapped at a coffee bar ordering a latte, surrounded by preening urbanites.

There has also been a surge in trendy pubs, especially in the touristy Temple Bar district.

With that in mind, here are best Dublin pubs, or at least the best ones I stumbled into during my intense and grueling research.

The Brazen Head: Yes, it's in the all brochures, advertising itself as the oldest pub in Dublin (dating to 1198). Robin Hood supposedly got sloshed here (and relieved himself on the old stone outside).

And even if it means dodging the tourists posing for pictures under the bar's sign, you'll want to hoist one where Robin Hood did.

The Brazen Head is sited in an unpretentious area on lower Bridge Street, right around the corner from Christ Church and the Guinness brewery and a block from the River Liffey. You can imagine old Celtic fishermen coming in for a pint, despite the tall modern building looming over the pub.

There are two small bars and an outdoor patio, heated and partially sheltered for those incessant drizzly days. For all the tourist trade, the Brazen head does bring in authentic locals, like the grizzled old guy with red hair who kept trying to cadge drinks off me.

The best thing about the place, though, is the live music, particularly the Sunday jam sessions. A terrific band was playing when I stopped by, with locals periodically jumping in singing sad Irish folk ballads. When you looked around you saw their compatriots with eyes cast down, spilling tears in their beers.

The Stag's Head: Down Dame Court, a little side street off Dame Street near Trinity College, the Stag's Head has stained-glass windows, elaborate mahogany woodwork and a marble-topped bar watched over by, natch, a big stag's head.

It's a beautiful place, with cozy little rooms off the main bar and additional sections on three floors. It was granted something called the "James Joyce Pub Award" for being an "authentic Dublin pub," and Mr. Joyce himself tippled here. So authentic and atmospheric is the Stag's Head that they film movies here, including Educating Rita.

The Hairy Lemon: The Hairy Lemon is what you expect an Irish pub to look like - cramped downstairs, with lots of wood and all sorts of Irish memorabilia on the walls: antique swords, aged guns, old rugby-match ticket stubs.

There's a stone arch inside and a smoking room upstairs, more spacious than the downstairs bar. Located in an old part of town at the corner of Drury and Lower Stephen streets, it's popular with students and trendy types listening to classic and indie rock. Avoid it in the evenings, when students love to go to real, authentic Irish pubs and listen to rock.

Worth a second pint:

The Beggars Bush: No frills here, just some of the cheapest pints in Dublin.

Mulligan's: Another great pub, whittled down to the essentials. No eat, just drink.

The Long Hall: Don't go if you're having a bad hair day. A ton of mirrors, but great Guinness. And as the old ad slogan goes, "Guinness for strength."

Stop in if you're thirsty: Davy Byrnes, Kehoe's and Sinnotts.

If you go:

The Beggars Bush
115 Haddington Road, Ballsbridge
Dublin 4
Phone: +3535 (0) 1 6682650

The Brazen Head
20 Bridge St.
Dublin 8
Phone: +353 (0) 1 6779549
Web: www.brazenhead.com

Davy Byrnes
21 Duke St.
Dublin 2
Phone: +353 (0) 1 6775217
Web: www.davybyrnes.com

The Hairy Lemon
42 Lower Stephen St.
Dublin 2
Phone: +353 (0) 1 6718949

Kehoe's
9 S. Anne St.
Dublin 2
Phone: +353 (0) 1 6778312

The Long Hall
51 S. Great Georges St.
Dublin 2
Phone: +353 (0) 1 4751590

Mulligan's
8 Poolbeg St.
Dublin 2
Phone: +353 (0) 1 6775582
Web: www.mulligans.ie/contact.html

Sinnotts
South King Street
Dublin 2
Phone: +353 (0) 1 4784698

The Stag's Head
1 Dame Court
Dublin 2
Phone: +353 (0) 1 6793701

SGH Golf
Web: www.sghgolf.com

Any opinions expressed above are those of the writer and do not necessarily represent the views of the management. Content for this site is provided by .

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