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Friday, 22 January 2021 13:52

Going Out in Shrewsbury

Published in Town & City Guide
Saturday, 19 December 2020 13:40

Going Out in Manchester

Published in Town & City Guide

Going Out is handing back control to venue owners and taking it away from unfair and biased, review based websites.

The majority of reviews left on mainstream websites are merely opinionated dribble! These websites are a breeding ground for the overly biased, unfair, frequently disingenuous and often aggressive opinions of individuals with too much time on their hands, looking to vent online with a community of equally ‘experienced counter-part critics’! Unfortunately, for venue owners and operators, these mainstream review based websites provide the platform, the allies and the audience in abundance.

We understand that reviews play an important part in consumer decision making and if processed with a ‘pinch-of-salt’ they can be helpful! However, it is rare that reviews of food and drink truly represent the product, premises, service or experience received, ranging from being disappointing, to potentially disastrous, for the pub, restaurant or venue in the public spotlight.

Negative Reviews 1

Negative reviews – an unfair rating system…

Tens of thousands of UK restaurants, pubs and hospitality venues fall foul of unbiased, opinionated, rude and damn-right insulting reviews left on major websites such as TripAdvisor. These negative reviews can be devastating for the business, often causing the venue owners a great deal of unnecessary stress and anxiety. User reviews can also go far beyond complaints about a mediocre meal, poor pint or shoddy service to much more serious claims about theft, fraud and sexual assault, the seriousness of these reviews becomes a huge and overwhelming problem for restaurant and pub owners throughout the UK.

Marketing people call a consistent one-star attack of negative reviews, on a single venue, “review bombing”. Negative review bombing is terminology that strikes fear into the heart of anybody operating a food and drink business; often these attacks go undetected by the website and unless the one-star reviews breach ‘review guidelines’ they are not easily removed! Before the TripAdvisor platform was launched back in 2000, the customer was not always king, and the customer was not always right! With the launch of several major review driven platforms it is now the case that the customer has become a formidable opponent, the customer is now empowered to make or break a venue – a daunting reality for restaurant and pub owners everywhere.

It is not uncommon for venue owners to lean on the legal sector and threaten to sue customers who post negative reviews about their venue. Unless dealing with an extreme and slanderous case this is typically a hugely expensive time-sink, with many hours of additional frustration and no satisfactory result.

image.jpeg

"But not all reviews are bad" we hear you say.... In fact, there are millions of positively glowing reviews online!

Fake reviews – a flawed rating system….

There is a huge shadow industry of fake reviews and people paid to leave fake reviews, good or bad! Reviews can be bought, sold and traded on the internet easily, completely undermining the entire review-based system – it is a flawed popularity contest in which you can pay to win, or pay for somebody else to lose!

The review based business model relies upon having real customers, post real reviews - it’s not rocket science, but it is exceptionally difficult and costly to police. Without this layer of transparency the entire credibility of a system must be questioned. Tripadvisor has been under scrutiny many times over the years with the credibility of reviews and ratings on the system in question. One of the most damaging aspects of fake reviews is that they cast doubt over genuine reviews, the reader may be able to spot an overly zealous review or a review that is just so bad it’s hard to comprehend, but this leaves the vast majority of food and drink reviews in a questionable limbo, “do I believe the information presented or not”. This trust issue results in a flawed business rating system.

It has been proven many times that anybody can beat an online review based website rating system. If you have ever watched the Vice magazine documentary created as a hoax by the journalist Oobah Butler called ‘The Shed at Dulwich’ then you will understand that review based ranking systems are fundamentally flawed. The Shed at Dulwich became the number 1, top-rated restaurant in London on TripAdvisor simply by uploading fake reviews!

Its well worth a watch, you can find the documentary here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqPARIKHbN8

Reviews shed dulwich

It is easy to understand just how simple it is to fabricate reviews and boost a venues’ popularity by review-bombing fake reviews. Platforms that can be manipulated and falsified to this degree are a serious concern to venue owners and are also doing the general public a disservice as they too are being deceived.

Common sense…

At Going Out we acknowledge that poor product and poor service exists and typically these factors alone will determine a venues fate! We understand that for high quality and well managed venues; you are only as good as your last service! Everybody in the trade has dealt with a difficult customer, everybody has a bad day, and everybody has the ability to improve, without the need for this to be unfairly advertised to millions of potential paying customers, through a negative review!

With over 800million reviews and opinions listed on the TripAdvisor website the problem facing landlords and restaurateurs in huge, on average their website receives 270 global contributions every minute, a frightening statistic if you happen to be on the receiving end of overly biased, unfair, disingenuous or the aggressive opinions of a disgruntled individual.

Beat the reviews…

It’s time to hand control back to venue owners! Thousands of venues are utilising www.goingout.co.uk to showcase their venue in detail and to promote their food and drink through the search engine. Restaurants, pubs clubs and venue owners are promoting their menu, facilities and benefits in real time and getting more paying customers through the door. Going Out is empowering venue owners to get more customers with NO REVIEWS!

Click here to register your venue.

Published in Food & Drink News
Wednesday, 16 September 2020 12:55

Copy of Venue Subscription Sign Up

Your GoingOut venue subscription

Please select a plan below, or
read further for more information

Select a Premium Plan

Go Premium Weekly

(Weekly Plan)

Your venue displayed as a Premium Profile on GoingOut

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • No minimum contract
  • Billed 4 weekly
£7.00 +VAT
Per week

Go Premium Annual

(Annual Plan)

Your venue displayed as a Premium Profile on GoingOut

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • Get 8 weeks free £390
  • Billed Annualy
£330.00 +VAT
Annually

Select a Spotlight Plan

Go Spotlight Weekly

(Weekly Plan)

Your venue displayed in a top 3 position on GoingOut for all searches matching your profile

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • 6 month minium contract
  • Billed 4 weekly
£22.50 +VAT
Per week

Go Spotlight Annual

(Annual Plan)

Your venue displayed in a top 3 position on GoingOut for all searches matching your profile

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • Get 8 weeks free £1,170
  • Billed annualy
£990.00 +VAT
Annually
If you have any questions or require assistance please call: 0330 111 3100 or click here to email us.

How GoingOut
works for your venue?

Create your Premium Venue Profile on the UK's Food & Drink Search Engine

Empowering
Venues

Promote your venue
to real-time customers
that are GoingOut

The Power
Of Your Menu

The GoingOut Search Engine
indexes your food & drink
items and enables customers
to find your venue based on
their search preferences

Premium Venue Profile Page

Click here to see an example

How customers find
your venue using GoingOut

Search for
Venue Name
(River Thai)

Search for
Cuisine Type
(Thai Food)

Search for
Food & Drink Items
(Pad Thai)

Search for
Nearby Places

Search for
Exact Location

Visit Venue

Book a Taxi

Premium venue profiles include

Upload your food
& drink menus

Upload unlimited
venue photos

Detailed venue
description

Connect with new
customers

Map location
& directions

Display your
opening hours

Display food
& drink options

List all of your
venue facilities

List all of your
venue features

Get discovered on
our mobile site

 

Manage your
hygiene rating

Boost online
visibility

Partnered with
local taxis

Powerful features & benefits

Use your menu
to promote
your Venue!
Powerful
food & drink
search engine
Handing control back to
venue owners by removing
unfair, review based rating
systems. Read More Here...
Spotlight Venue
An additional feature to
display your venue in
position 1,2 or 3 for all
searches matching
your profile data
Passionate
about working with
& supporting
UK venues
Cross-promote
your delivery
services
Dedicated
Venue Account
Manager

Improve your online visibility

Use your GoingOut profile as your own business
website or link to it from your existing website to
boost your visibility in Google.

You will never need to pay a web designer or
developer and there are no other costs such as
technical support, domain name and website
hosting, we take care of everything for you.

Click here to see a Premium Venue Profile example

We provide you with
digital stationery to
promote your profile
and link to your
GoingOut page.

We send you promotional items

Promotional
Beer Mats

Window
Stickers

Select a Premium Plan

Go Premium Weekly

(Weekly Plan)

Your venue displayed as a Premium Profile on GoingOut

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • No minimum contract
  • Billed 4 weekly
£7.00 +VAT
Per week

Go Premium Annual

(Annual Plan)

Your venue displayed as a Premium Profile on GoingOut

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • Get 8 weeks free £390
  • Billed Annualy
£330.00 +VAT
Annually

Select a Spotlight Plan

Go Spotlight Weekly

(Weekly Plan)

Your venue displayed in a top 3 position on GoingOut for all searches matching your profile

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • 6 month minium contract
  • Billed 4 weekly
£22.50 +VAT
Per week

Go Spotlight Annual

(Annual Plan)

Your venue displayed in a top 3 position on GoingOut for all searches matching your profile

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • Get 8 weeks free £1,170
  • Billed annualy
£990.00 +VAT
Annually
If you have any questions or require assistance please call: 0330 111 3100 or click here to email us.
Published in Pages
Sunday, 13 September 2020 15:47

Feature Your Venue | Get More Customers

Free Premium Venue Listing for 12 months

£330 in advertising support for every UK venue.
Going Out are helping to rebuild the UK Hospitality sector

Rebuilding Hospitality - Pandemic Support - #GetGoingOut

Enter code: BTB330

Once you have claimed your venue listing below, enter the code at
the checkout to claim your 12 months free Premium Venue Listing.

* The balance payable is £0. There are no fees and no hidden charges.
We are working hard to support UK Hospitality and help rebuild the sector.

Your GoingOut venue subscription

Please select a plan below, or
read further for more information

Select a Premium Plan

Your venue displayed as a Premium Profile on GoingOut

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • No minimum contract
  • Billed 4 weekly
FREE with code BTB330

Go Premium Annual

(Annual Plan)

Your venue displayed as a Premium Profile on GoingOut

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • Get 8 weeks free £390
  • Billed Annualy
FREE with code BTB330

Select a Spotlight Plan

Go Spotlight Weekly

(Weekly Plan)

Your venue displayed in a top 3 position on GoingOut for all searches matching your profile

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • 6 month minium contract
  • Billed 4 weekly
£22.50 +VAT
Per week

Go Spotlight Annual

(Annual Plan)

Your venue displayed in a top 3 position on GoingOut for all searches matching your profile

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • Get 8 weeks free £1,170
  • Billed annualy
£990.00 +VAT
Annually
If you have any questions or require assistance please call: 0330 111 3100 or click here to email us.

How GoingOut
works for your venue?

Create your Premium Venue Profile on the UK's Food & Drink Search Engine

Empowering
Venues

Promote your venue
to real-time customers
that are GoingOut

The Power
Of Your Menu

The GoingOut Search Engine
indexes your food & drink
items and enables customers
to find your venue based on
their search preferences

Premium Venue Profile Page

Click here to see an example

How customers find
your venue using GoingOut

Search for
Venue Name
(River Thai)

Search for
Cuisine Type
(Thai Food)

Search for
Food & Drink Items
(Pad Thai)

Search for
Nearby Places

Search for
Exact Location

Visit Venue

Book a Taxi

Premium venue profiles include

Upload your food
& drink menus

Upload unlimited
venue photos

Detailed venue
description

Connect with new
customers

Map location
& directions

Display your
opening hours

Display food
& drink options

List all of your
venue facilities

List all of your
venue features

Get discovered on
our mobile site

 

Manage your
hygiene rating

Boost online
visibility

Partnered with
local taxis

Powerful features & benefits

Use your menu
to promote
your Venue!
Powerful
food & drink
search engine
Handing control back to
venue owners by removing
unfair, review based rating
systems. Read More Here...
Spotlight Venue
An additional feature to
display your venue in
position 1,2 or 3 for all
searches matching
your profile data
Passionate
about working with
& supporting
UK venues
Cross-promote
your delivery
services
Dedicated
Venue Account
Manager

Improve your online visibility

Use your GoingOut profile as your own business
website or link to it from your existing website to
boost your visibility in Google.

You will never need to pay a web designer or
developer and there are no other costs such as
technical support, domain name and website
hosting, we take care of everything for you.

Click here to see a Premium Venue Profile example

We provide you with
digital stationery to
promote your profile
and link to your
GoingOut page.

We send you promotional items

Promotional
Beer Mats

Window
Stickers

Select a Premium Plan

Go Premium Weekly

(Weekly Plan)

Your venue displayed as a Premium Profile on GoingOut

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • No minimum contract
  • Billed 4 weekly
FREE with code BTB330

Go Premium Annual

(Annual Plan)

Your venue displayed as a Premium Profile on GoingOut

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • Get 8 weeks free £390
  • Billed Annualy
FREE with code BTB330

Select a Spotlight Plan

Go Spotlight Weekly

(Weekly Plan)

Your venue displayed in a top 3 position on GoingOut for all searches matching your profile

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • 6 month minium contract
  • Billed 4 weekly
£22.50 +VAT
Per week

Go Spotlight Annual

(Annual Plan)

Your venue displayed in a top 3 position on GoingOut for all searches matching your profile

  • Your own Premium Profile
  • Get 8 weeks free £1,170
  • Billed annualy
£990.00 +VAT
Annually
If you have any questions or require assistance please call: 0330 111 3100 or click here to email us.
Published in Pages
Saturday, 11 July 2020 16:44

Covid-19 Statement

Covid-19 (COrona VIrus Disease 2019) Important Message

In this difficult time, it is our obligation to find solutions to the problems that we face and support each other within the workplace and the wider community.

At GoingOut Ltd we are cancelling all face to face meetings and will conduct all business activity in a controlled environment, utilising digital video conference facilities and telephone consultancy.

Our objective is to keep all staff, clients and general public safe and protected to limit and prevent where possible the further spread of COVID 19. 

If you or a family member is concerned that you may have symptoms of COVID-19, you should seek immediate advice from your own medical practitioner and/or your Local Authority. 

More information can be found on the Government website: https://www.gov.uk/find-coronavirus-support

We can all help to control the virus if we all stay alert.

Thank you

Going Out Limited

Published in Policies
Saturday, 11 July 2020 15:30

Taxi Operator Infographic

GoingOut for Taxi Operators

GongOut is the UK’s leading food & drink
search engine. Discover how our exclusive
taxi partner program benefits your business.

Increase Business
connect directly With
people GoingOut in
your location.
122,184
UK venues
listed

(As of July 2020)

Our directory of UK
venues & destinations
is constantly updating

Website search results based on location

Click here to see an example

Real time
customers
that need
a taxi

How GoingOut works for users

Customer Searches
  • Food & Drink
  • Cuisine Type
  • Venue Name
Customer Results

Venues are listed
by address in
order of proximity

Your taxi contact details
are displayed with
push to call function

How GoingOut works for Taxi Operators

Your taxi advert will be displayed on all food & drink search results
in your preselected geographical locations. This system enables
users to view your advert and call directly to make a booking.

Only 2 taxi
firms
are
allocated
per location,
keeping the
competition to
a minimum.

FREE Advert Design RRP£120

We have a professional inhouse
graphic design team that can create
your business adverts free of charge.

Dedicated
Customer Service
Assistant

We send you car stickers

We send you window stickers
to display on all of your vehicles.

Let customers know that you are their
chosen GoingOut taxi when you arrive.

Passengers can also scan the QR code
to find new and exciting places to go.

Join GoingOut today

Your taxi firm
promoted on
GoingOut from
just £3 per day

Please complete the form below and we will contact you.
If you have any questions or require assistance please
Click here to chat or call: 0330 111 3100

Published in Pages
Saturday, 29 February 2020 13:41

Advertise

Are you a Taxi Operator?

Promote your taxi firm. GoingOut is the UK’s leading food and drink search engine targeted at the Hospitality sector. Discover how our exclusive taxi partner program benefits your business and can increase your income. Click to find out more…

Find out more

Looking to advertise a service or product?

We work with select partners that are offering products and services beneficial to our audience. This includes advertising to our venues in the back-end system and also to users on the front end. Click to find out more…

Find out more

Are you a Venue owner?

Promote your venue to real-time customers that are GoingOut in your area. The GoingOut search engine indexes your food and drink items and enables customers to find you based on their exact search preferences. Click to find out more…

Find out more
 
Published in Pages

With fewer customers eating at restaurants, operators are eyeing more compact locations with dedicated areas for takeout orders.

Restaurants are shrinking. Even though more people are eating out than before, fewer are sticking around to eat their meal in store. With this shift, brands from Firehouse Subs to McDonald's and Dunkin' to Pizza Hut are rethinking design for both front- and back-of-house to better accommodate delivery and takeout — a strategy that often includes smaller formats.

When considering design, restaurants traditionally focused on minimum guest count and maximizing seats in a dining room, but these conversations are changing, Big Red Rooster Senior Vice President and Managing Director Josh Broehl told Restaurant Dive. Big Red Rooster is a JLL company that works with retailers and restaurants on experience design, brand marketing, design management and strategy consulting.

"It's now about throughput. It's now about how many customers can we serve," he said.

With multiple avenues to reach customers from delivery to mobile order pickups, there's less need for a dining room, he said. There's also financial incentive to reduce — or forgo — the physical dining space. Broehl estimates that dine-in now accounts for about 15% of a typical restaurant's sales compared to several years ago, when it was roughly 40%.

Restaurants are also analyzing customer traffic flow more closely to accommodate those that want to dash inside for pickup as well as others who want to mull over a menu and then decide onsite, Broehl said.

"We need to make sure those pathways are intuitive and easy, avoiding the bottlenecks," he said.

Restaurant design is starting to incorporate different zones where third-party deliveries can do pickups or wait for fulfillment of orders, he said.

"Delivery is a must-have these days," Pamela Flora, director of Americas retail research at Cushman & Wakefield, told Restaurant Dive. "How are [restaurants] balancing delivery prep space versus dining space? Do they have easy access for third-party pickups?"

Mobile orders fulfilled onsite are being brought toward the front for quick pickups and are separate from onsite ordering and dining, Broehl said. Shelves and lockers are increasingly popular as well, with the likes of Chipotle, Blaze Pizza and Cava adding shelves. While there were originally concerns about theft or tampering of food left on shelves, that has yet to emerge as a problem, Broehl said.

"Delivery is a must-have these days. How are [restaurants] balancing delivery prep space versus dining space? Do they have easy access for third-party pickups?" - Pamela Flora - Director of Americas retail research, Cushman & Wakefield

Needing less dine-in space is opening up options for restaurants. They don't need to spend as much on real estate costs and can instead use inline spaces within a retail block instead of a standalone location, Broehl said.

"You'll continue to see that trend where restaurants can take advantage of these more flexible spaces, which will definitely help their operating costs," he said.

While dining rooms are decreasing in size, kitchens are growing due to the addition of digital orders, he said. That often means having multiple makelines. Previously, there may have been a makeline for dine-in and drive-thru orders, but now some QSRs with drive-thrus are even adding a third makeline to accommodate mobile orders, Broehl said.

For an independent restaurant like fast casual Bamboo Asia in San Francisco, many of these design concepts, including a small footprint, were part of the plan from the beginning. The restaurant uses a commissary kitchen to prepare much of the Vietnamese, Japanese and Indian dishes that make up its menu offsite, and a sous vide to heat onsite. This allows for a smaller kitchen without heavy equipment, TRI Commercial Restaurant Specialist Erik Reese told Restaurant Dive. He has helped conceptualize restaurants, including Bamboo Asia, throughout his 20-year career in the industry.

The 1,800-square-foot restaurant only has 30 seats inside and eight outside, and most of its business is off-premise, he said. The restaurant serves about 550 customers between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

With less real estate needs, the restaurant was able to relocate in a prime area of downtown San Francisco, where retail rents are $450 per square feet, according to Cushman & Wakefield data.

"It really reduces our labor demands and allows us to get spaces that other companies can't take," he said.

Its location on a popular downtown intersection also serves as a marketing tool for the thousands of drivers who pass by, he said.

"The whole restaurant is an advertisement," he said.

The company is adding 12 more locations by the end of 2020 and plans to open another commissary kitchen, all of which will be built around the idea that around 25% of the business going toward delivery, he said.

A new QSR model

Major QSRs are taking cues from delivery and carryout trends as well. Fast casuals including Cava, Blaze Pizza and Chipotle are testing out drive-thrus for mobile pickup orders. Others, like Firehouse Subs, Subway, Dunkin', McDonald's and Caribou Coffee, are eyeing complete remodels and smaller store formats.

Firehouse Subs is testing a prototype that would be a dramatic design shift for the brand. It uses 25% less kitchen space and holds 28 seats compared to a traditional design of 50 seats.

The design also moves the kitchen from the front to back of the restaurant to better accommodate pickups, which have its own designated area. A stackable sandwich steamer, new to the prototype, helps reduce heating time by a minute, and CEO Don Fox told Restaurant Business the new prototype could result in one less person needed each shift.

Firehouse Subs has plenty of motivation to move toward this model. Its off-premise business now makes up more than half of its sales, according to Restaurant Business.

While McDonald's is in the midst of a major renovation across its U.S. system that will add self-order kiosks, it is also testing a McDonald's To Go format in London. Customers order using kiosks, staff is mainly back of house and there is no seating. The concept is meant to accommodate only diners on the go.

Pizza Hut is piloting cubbies for pickup orders in California and plans to expand the test into additional West Coast cities next year. These cubbies, aimed to complement its dine-in experience, are placed toward the front of the store and are meant to appeal to customers on-the-go who don't want to interact with restaurant staff. These moves seem to align with the company's recently announced strategy of closing 500 units and reopening them with its delivery and carryout-focused format that offers less dine-in seating.

Caribou Coffee is rolling out a small-format concept in Minnesota called Caribou Cabins. These 600-square-foot stores don't have any dine-in seating, but offer outdoor seating, a drive-thru and a walk-up window. The Cabin stores will offer an expanded beverage menu and a selection of breakfast sandwiches and baked goods. Caribou Coffee is looking to add more locations within the next 24 months, with five opening up in Minnesota initially. The chain will also explore additional store formats in urban and suburban areas.

There could be even more design changes ahead for the dining experience as diner demand shifts.

"Restaurants are working to bring the dining experience to customers when and where they are," Broehl said.

Instead of being tied to a set kitchen, restaurants could potentially serve up meals in a local park or food hall or other community experience, he said. Several chains like Auntie Anne's and Shake Shack have already done so by launching fleets of food trucks and opening locations at airports and travel plazas.

For consumers, it will only become easier to order out — exactly what restaurants need.

Published in Food & Drink News

There's more choice than ever before this year with more than 80 businesses in the county offering discounted menus.

More restaurants than ever before have signed up to this year's Norfolk Restaurant Week and sister event, Norwich Restaurant Week, with organiser Martin Billing saying it will be the best one yet.

Now in its seventh year and billed as the largest dining event in the county, the foodie feasting takes place between October 28 and November 8, with more than 80 of Norfolk's top restaurants, pubs and cafes signed up to participate.

Newcomers this year include The Victoria in Holkham, plant-based Erpingham House in Norwich, The Black Horse in Castle Rising, Timbers Country lodge in Fincham, Sculthorpe Mill and The Iron House, Norwich.

Loui Blake, owner of Erpingham House says: "We're incredibly excited to be participating in Norfolk restaurant week for the first time. Our intention is to offer diners some never-before-seen dishes and offer an insight into plant-based dining, proving healthy and sustainable food can be delicious! We're seeing a dramatic spike in the demand for vegan food, with Norwich often quoted as one of the best hubs nationally. We hope through restaurant week we can offer local diners a taste of something to inspire them."

Ben Hunter-Watts, The Victoria's managing director adds: "Michael Chamberlain, our head chef, has participated in Norfolk Restaurant Week in his previous position prior to taking on the running of the kitchen here at the Victoria. He is excited to have the opportunity to this year showcase the fantastic local and estate raised produce he is so passionate about using here at the Vic on his restaurant week menu."

During the period of the event (actually two weeks), all businesses taking part will offer set, discounted menus, giving diners in the region the chance to perhaps explore eateries they might not have considered before. Customers will have the option (depending on where they're dining) to pay £12 for two courses or £17 for three, or £18 for two and £23 for three.

It's estimated more than 1,000 people book a stay to coincide with Norfolk Restaurant Week which is why the county's largest independent holiday lettings agency, Norfolk Cottages, has signed up to be headline sponsor for the second year running.

"We know that Norfolk's reputation for outstanding local produce and a rich food and drink scene is one of the reasons our discerning customers choose the county as a holiday destination. We also see a 15% increase in visitor numbers over the fortnight, further demonstrating the fact Norfolk is a year-round destination.

See all the businesses taking part here.

A glimpse at some of the menus

NoTwenty9, Burnham Market

Starters include: cured sea trout with gin and tonic gel, pickled vegetables and Paston Acre sprouting rye bread, and 'ham, egg and chips' - pork terrine with fried quail's egg and matchstick potato

Main courses include: fillet of hake with Creole sauce, coconut rice and kale, and shallot and celeriac tarte tatin with walnut and fig salad

Desserts include: baked chocolate mousse, blackberry ice cream and chocolate crumb, and pecan pie with pecan brittle and raw milk ice cream

Published in Food & Drink News