![friar tuck beverage friar tuck beverage](https://i.pinimg.com/236x/1e/10/3c/1e103c254b2550abe2279d2ab171427e--hummel-bb.jpg)
The clientele tends to be older neighborhood types, but the place does attract some cell phone-toting young professionals that now predominate the area. Most people have known each other for years and often travel together on bar-sponsored outings. The crowd is what really seems to make Friar Tuck a good bar. They might even let you use the phone behind the bar to place your order.
#FRIAR TUCK BEVERAGE FREE#
Friar Tuck’s does not serve food but feel free to have it delivered. You can even get yourself Busch on draft. While the beer selection is fairly limited to mass-produced American brews, the $4 mini-pitcher deal is quite attractive. There are also two video poker machines and four televisions scattered around the room. This area has a wooden floor and also serves as the stage for karaoke on Wednesdays and Thursdays and blues on Monday nights. In the corner of the room are the other two dartboards. On the right hand side of the room are high wooden tables with convenient footrests, and a brick-enclosed fireplace. Next to that is one of three regulation dartboards and the wall is covered with corkboard complete with dozens of patron pictures tacked to it. Around the corner by the front window is a pay phone and the Golden Tee machine. It looks like a shingled, wooden hood used to surround the bar but now has been cut away so that only the front third remains, suspended from the ceiling with rusty chains. The first thing you’ll see is the long, rectangular bar that in the middle of the room.
![friar tuck beverage friar tuck beverage](https://pics.onsizzle.com/ron-burgundy-anchorman-this-is-grain-which-any-fool-can-3980015.png)
Step into the giant cask through the thick wooden door and under the faded Friar Tuck’s sign. While seemingly forbidding on the outside with its narrow windows that you can’t really see into and dark, heavy wooded exterior, Friar Tuck is a rather warm and inviting place on the inside. Have you ever gone up Broadway and seen the bar that looks like the top of a giant beer barrel sunken partially into the ground, just before the Dominick’s (prior to its burning down)? Then you’ve seen Friar Tuck.