The world is full
of bar lists -- 10 this, 10 that -- but the ultimate must be one from
liquor.com -- The 263 Bars That Matter Most. Among them is
Black Pearl, which might be the one on Water Street downtown across the street
from the antique mall and the St. Laurent nut house.
But it's not. The one on the list is in Fitzroy, Australia, a Melbourne
suburb, and it's said to have "a vibe that feels like a 1970s
bachelor pad in the best possible way."
The Black Pearl in
Bay City does have touches of bachelor pad. A foosball table, for instance,
which might be out of place at a rum bar with a pirate motif. But even old
pirates must have liked to relax with a friendly game after a tough day of
plundering on the high seas.
Even better, there’s
a pool table (along with a pinball machine, a dartboard and a bar-top
electronic console). You might not think of a rum bar if you’re looking for a
good place to shoot pool downtown. But you should.
For one thing, the Black Pearl was virtually deserted for an entire Thursday afternoon when we showed up. On a Friday afternoon, a big group of folks showed up, but none of them were
The view from the pool table |
For another, the table
is like new. The felt is pristine. There’s even a brush to whisk off any errant
crumbs. Everything is level and there’s plenty of space; no worries about
shooting too close to a wall. The cues are new and straight. Games are $1.
This is worth knowing
because Jake’s, the bar a block away, recently got rid of its pool and
shuffleboard tables in a continuing move to crawl upscale from what had been a
perfectly good inexpensive corner bar.
But
a mystery remained: Why isn’t the Black Pearl more popular?
Reviews
on Yelp and Trip Advisor are split between great (“Food is
amazing.”) and awful (“Absolutely disgusting!”), with some amusement at the
theme (“We found it a little odd that our server was dressed up like a
pirate.”).
After
three visits, we get the picture.
For starters, at
a place called a rum bar and rok grille, you expect a place to get rum and a
rok grille, whatever that is. And if that isn’t what you want, you’ll likely go
elsewhere.
Too
bad. Black Pearl must be the best place in town to go for something involving
rum. But it has a full bar and an assortment of beers. And very
little of the menu –- which includes a wide
assortment of burgers -- has any connection to the rok thing.
A wall of booze (and beers) |
The
Black Pearl’s building has had various names over the years. It was last called
Dockside but earlier had been the Blackhawk, Brass Lantern, Kingfish and
Shipyard. Maybe people don’t know what to expect inside. Or maybe the ghost of
the collapsed Third Street Bridge, which was next door, is to blame.
The
interior is appealing, though the great river view through large windows was
obscured by pirate drawings on the glass.
First
time out, the background music was so loud it wasn’t in the background at all.
On later visits, though, the sound was calmer.
Oddly,
the name on the outdoor sign (and on the bar’s Facebook page) says “rum bar
& rok grille.” But the menus say “rok grille n’ rum bar.” The bar’s website
is blackpearlrumbarandrokgrille.com, but it shows the name the other way. It
doesn’t much matter but seems like a basic thing to get straight. (And an
editing suggestion: If you’re open seven days a week, don’t write “Open
Sunday-Monday”.)
There
is a lot more rum bar than rok grille about the place, so we’d put the rum
before the rok. And if you’re wondering about the rok grille, it’s a cook-it-yourself
way to make steaks on a high-temp stone. You’ll have to spend a few bucks for
it: An 8-ounce sirloin, listed on the menu as a Canon Ball (which we assume is
a misspelling and has nothing to do with church doctrine) is $19; a 6-ounce
filet mignon is $26.
On
a Friday night, Harry decided to pop for the sirloin. It arrived very rare,
sizzling on the hot stone. The server suggested cutting it up a bit so it didn’t
take so long to cook. The downside to this is that if you’re picky about how
well your meat is done, you have to keep an eye on it yourself (“I could have
done that at home,” Mrs. Hairy Guy noted), and it’ll keep cooking until you
take it off the stone. The upside is that the meat stays hot. And it was a fine
steak. It came
with garlic mashed potatoes (though there was no hint of
garlic). Harry had to ask for salt. We’d have stuck around for coffee and
dessert, but the server didn’t bother to ask.
All Hands on Deck, one of the burgers |
Earlier,
eyeing the hamburger list on an afternoon visit, Harry took the server’s
recommendation and got the All Hands on Deck. (Yes, most of the food has cute
names, like Redbeard’s French onion soup.) It includes mashed potatoes, bacon,
cheddar and chives -– all of it, potatoes included, piled on a thick bun. This
sounds appealing, since it covers all of Harry’s basic food groups. But the
whole thing won’t fit in your mouth. And between the potatoes and the bun, it’s
all too dry to make a good burger. Even with fries, at $12 it could walk the
plank.
Mrs.
Hairy Guy got a burger called the Duchess, which (at $11) has mushrooms, onions
and Swiss. She loved it.
And
on a return visit, Harry got a Bay City Blue, with bleu cheese and bacon. It’s
big, juicy and easily one of the best burgers in town.
The
menu also includes salads, assorted fish dinners and sandwiches (called “seawiches”
on the menu, even though most of them don’t have anything to do with fish) --
among them a peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich souped up with bacon for $7. (And
since the beer list includes Pabst
Blue Ribbon, you could, just to say you did
it, get a PB&J and PBR.)
Black Pearl's house cocktails, all with rum |
But let's return to the bar side of things.
Assorted craft beers are on tap. Harry got a pint of Basic Bitch Blonde ($5) from Flint’s Tenacity Brewing, hoping to get a rise out of his wife. She ignored it and got an iced tea ($2).
Assorted craft beers are on tap. Harry got a pint of Basic Bitch Blonde ($5) from Flint’s Tenacity Brewing, hoping to get a rise out of his wife. She ignored it and got an iced tea ($2).
A
separate menu of rum drinks includes a Bloody Gary -– a Bloody Mary but with
rum instead of vodka ($5 on Sundays).
A
couple others on the list -– Captain’s Rum Punch and the Rum Runner (each $7) --
include nine ingredients, many of them sweet things. Racheal (yes, that’s how
she spells it), who works days, says they’re the top sellers. But Harry didn’t
want to put anyone through all that work for something he probably wouldn’t
like anyway. So he got an Original Dark N Stormy ($6), made of black rum and
ginger beer with a lime wedge. It was a surprisingly great yet simple drink.
And
by then, it was time to ask for a Manhattan, Harry’s usual drink. (The bar does
have a
complete stock of liquids besides rum.) It came with three cherries, but
Harry would swear there was no vermouth; it tasted like whiskey and water, which
is good but not what he had in mind.
Racheal at the bar |
On
a Friday night, though, the drinks were quite different. The Manhattan was a
typical Manhattan. But the Dark N Stormy, which tasted great the first time
out, was more like a medicinal concoction. It was much stronger than the first
one, leading Harry to conclude that it was the ginger beer, rather than the
rum, that tastes so good. Oh, well.
Mixed
drinks, by the way, come in uniquely-designed glasses that sit crooked and may lead
you to wonder if you’ve had too many drinks even when you haven’t. And when the
time comes, a note of caution about the men’s room: It’s a good-looking room.
But the floor was all sticky and the place smelled bad. Second time out, the
floor was better.
Out
back, on the river side, is a large multilevel wooden deck that leads down to a
dock. It was
too cool to sit outside when we showed up the first time. But on a
comfortable Friday night, it was wonderful, with a clear view of action on the
river, traffic on the Liberty Bridge and the illuminated fountain in the Waterfall
Park next door.
The large deck out back |
Black
Pearl is open noon-9 p.m. Sunday and Monday, 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday,
11 a.m.-11 p.m. Friday and Saturday. There is no happy hour.
Bottom line: Sit outside if you
can. Drink a beer. Try a burger. Shoot pool. Or play foosball, but only if
you’re feeling nostalgic for your 1970s bachelor pad.
----------
See Doc’s
report: Black Pearl has it all (and maybe even a bit too much)
Black
Pearl
1019 N. Water
989-778-2231
2 comments:
Thank you for the visit, look forward to seeing you again!
Black pearl is no longer in business
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