top of page

Eat, Drink, Play and Party in Birmingham

 

When it comes to food, you can plainly take your choice from a complete host of diverse flavors.  From customary British food to a taste of the Mediterranean, you can example a diverse theme every day.

 

The brilliant Balti Triangle covers a number of restaurants compressed around Balsall Heath, Sparkbrook, and Moseley so if you fancy an Asian meal, you know where to go.

 

When it comes to quality, you can choose for Michelin star restaurants or somewhere to enjoy a rapid bite and with over 200 restaurants signifying 27 different ethnic group, you will never be stuck for choice.

 

The 2009 Michelin Guide for Ireland and Great Britain contains three Birmingham restaurants, the Purnell's, Harbourne restaurant,  and Edgbaston's Simpsons so if top quality is what you're after then you can positively find it in Birmingham.

 

No other city or town outside London claims so numerous top ranking restaurants and Birmingham is fast charming known as England's second culinary capital.

 

Birmingham's numerous restaurants are flawlessly offset by a similarly diverse array of pubs where you can take a break from the shove and activity of the city streets and enjoy a stimulating drink.

 

There are pre-clubbing hot spots, student night outs and chic cocktail bars birmingham to pick from so whether you're a champagne fan or a rock diva, you can party into the minor hours in surroundings to suit your attitude.

 

There is plenty more to do and see from cocktail bar in birmingham aside from drinking and eating.  The heritage of the city dates back to the Middle Ages so if you fancy taking in some history and culture then you may perhaps head to Aston Hall, one of England's great country houses that was built by Sir Thomas Holte in 1618. 

Blakesley Hall is another place of historical interest.  Built in 1590 for Birmingham business man Richard Smallbroke, the house is equipped to mirror the lifestyle of a wealthy family of the late Tudor and Stuart period of English history and is one of the rare places in the city where you can catch a precise glimpse of what life used to be like here.

 

If you fancy resting your feet and feasting your eyes, then Birmingham's huge selection of cinemas won't dissatisfy whether you want to see a self-determining piece of film or ordinary movie. Birmingham's Electric Cinema is the ancient working cinema in the United Kingdom and is still going strong since first opening its doors in 1909.

bottom of page