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Bidrage med feedbackOn a popular circular walk from Bungay about 2 hours. Good beer, and nice friendly locals. Only snacks available, but home made sausage rolls and scotch eggs were very good and filling.
A proper pub with good honest food, in a great location, hope it's always there. Don't expect city chic! But it's real.
We have been visiting this brewhouse for years now, It's a real gem, come here for the on site micro brewery. Amazing beers with local flavour. Sandwiches at lunchtime are top notch too.
On a trip back from Lowestoft we decided to visit the Queen 's Head for a pub lunch. The pub is set in a quiet village, opposite the green, We sampled the ales from the Waveney Brewing Co. whose home the pub is. The sausage and onion baguettes were very good and very reasonably priced. All in all, we would recommend the Queen 's head and will certainly return.
Unfortunately I believe Stuart below has got the wrong Queens Head. This Queens Head in Earsham is not the pub pictured as it is traditional Suffolk Pink in colour and does not have the pub name on the side of the building, does not have a large car park to the side, and most importantly does not do food, just excellent ales and bar snacks.I believe Chris could have visited the Queens Head in Hethersett on his way to Norwich as this is a yellow painted pub with a large car park This Queens Head is situated in Earsham on the Norfolk-Suffolk border, just outside the town of Bungay. It is a 17th-century busy locals brewpub and benefits from a large front concrete outdoor section overlooking the village green which includes a large marquee tent at the back to provide cover. You enter into the main bar room which has a has flagstone floor, wooden beams and a large fireplace for a roaring fire in winter. Then there is a separate room with additional seating off to the side. The bar supports four real ale hand pumps and as the pub is home to the Waveney Brewing Co. at least one of the brewery beers is usually on the pumps. We were staying just up the road for a week and visited a couple of times and all the beers I tried were very decent. The in house brewery Lightweight session bitter a 3.3% ale at £3.30 a pint) was on for our visits alongside New Bristol Brewery Starlight, Vocation Life and Death and Derby Brewing Co Derby Express ESB. We were very lucky that our first night coincided with the Earsham fete when the pub was holding a beer festival and the side room was taken over by 12 barrels on stillage and although a few had gone by the time we got there in the evening, I was still able to have a session on the dark stuff and enjoyed Fat Cat Brewery Plum Porter, Vocation Naughty and Nice Salted Caramel Stout and 8 Sail Brewery Millwright Mild