Specialising in beer, the Beer Cafe is not the usual fare from large brewers or multinationals. The bar Offers local specialties that is more obscure in UK. Kolsch, eastern European, etc are some of the foreign beers that's on offer. The atmosphere is inviting and spacious to drink inside with great views of the world outside.
Tucked away off Buchanan Street, this small bar is rightly located well behind Princes Square. Great beer, brilliant service and laid back tone. Perhaps it will do a mean cocktail with gentle dealings. It has a beer garden in the city centre. Best in Glasgow's tropical climate.
This disco & northern soul club is hidden away from the neon student filled barns on Sauciehall Street. The atmosphere is always crowded with diverse people.
Serving contemporary Scottish food, this restaurent is tucked away in the West End in a great setting. Bothy manages to have irn-bru sorbet on the menu. The restaurent gives an elegant feel to its visitors. And so is one of the favourite restaurents of Scottish people.
A rare find gem, Trans-Europe Cafe is Glasgow's best dine-in location. Range from great menu, bucks fizz and all sitting on old corporation train seats are on offer.
Tucked off the Buchanan Street in Glasgow, Bread and Butter is a new bar and diner serving wholesome good food from 12pm until 4am. The friendly atmosphere and a great selection of food and drinks offered at Bread and Butter has something for everyone!
Famous in serving delicious home cooking from breakfast 'til supper, The Left Blank is an inviting bar and kitchen. Using seasonal and local produce wherever possible the extensive menus include bar snacks, smoothies, cocktails, coffees, brunch, lunch, all day mains and an evening menu as well as a prix fixe menu and extensive range of wines available by the glass. Drinks are available as beer, wine & spirits, soft drinks, boutique beer on tap, cocktails, extensive range of beers, International beers and a great wine list.
The food is second to none. The menu ranges from tapas including home-fried yellow corn chips and lemon and pea pilaf to evening main courses such as Goan Masala seafood in a coconut and squash vindaloo. You can always find a crowd of artists, locals, professionals and students.Makes you feel a friendly atmosphere, ralaxed and stylish!
You shouldn't miss a visit to the Downtown area. Located next to Glasgow Central train station, Downtown Bar Bistro offers you just exactly what you are looking for. Downtown arrays a Bistro, a Cocktail lounge, a sports Bar and a traditional Bar! Offering great prices and promotions on both food and drink produce. Live Music and eating out here will give a coolinery effect to your tastebuds. It is a great place to come and chill out and leave the day behind and get your night off to a great start.
Cosmopol is based in the heart of the city in Hope Street. People choose this bar-restaurent as an ideal drop-in after their work, or to rest in the middle of a shopping trip. If you choose to enjoy life, enjoy a fine dining, fine wines and inspirational surrounding's that is completely Cosmopol at any time of the day.
Cosmopol is also an ideal find for business lunches and pre-theatre meals. Enjoy the exquisite menus well prepared by expert chefs in the vibe and decor of the restaurent. Prices are really surprising and the restaurent is comfortable.
King Tut's Wah Wah Hut is one of Glasgow's leading concert venues, renowned in Scotland as an exciting showcase for new and emerging bands and as the venue that supported some of the UK music industry's biggest names at the start of their careers.It is owned and managed by Scotland's foremost music promoters DF Concerts. King Tut's Wah Wah Hut borrowed its name from a venue in New York and opened it in basement premises in Glasgow's St Vincent Street, aiming from the outset to offer Scotland's best line up of new and established bands, as well as being a relaxing place to enjoy good food and drink.
This finest jukebox in Glasgow should be enough to tempt you through Sleazy's door. If not, you may be enticed by the cheap food and some stellar live music. Sleazy has gone from strength to strength and plays host to a smorgasbord of musical styles on an almost nightly basis. Expect the clientele here to be painfully well dressed, beautiful and knowledgeable about rare Smith's b-sides - none of those are bad things,by the way.
Situated in a former stable and coach house in Glasgow's West End, Brel bar/restaurant aims to provide quality Belgian food and drink reflecting the best of what's available on the Continent. Brel was voted Glasgows 3rd best live music venue this year by Guardian Travel. Brel conducts free Live Jazz on Saturday afternoons, campfire on thursadays and DJs at weekends too.
Brel has loads of beers - especially Belgian ones. Draught and bottles (big bottles or normal ones), lots of lagers and dark beers too, as well as various fruit beers from blackcurrant to banana.Brel also offers a compact yet eclectic quaffable selection of wines in affordable prices.
No musical tour of Glasgow would be complete without a trip to the incomparable Barras.The Barrowland Ballroom is a major dance hall and concert venue in Glasgow. You can always expect a pack of crowds during all nighrs being entranced by perfect acoustics and the best live music on offer. Homegrown talents like Primal Scream and Teenage Fanclub have all delighted home crowds at the Barras in the past. Bands seem to adore the place and mega-dome performers regularly take a sizable pay-cut for the chance to play here. In a fit of ecstasy after a gig there in 1996, Metallica labelled it the best performance of their career.