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Restaurants Warrington - Places To Eat Warrington - Best Restaurants Warrington
"Only complaint is that I have to drive 20mins each way and the pizza gets cold by the time I get home. 14/04/2021: Without doubt the best Pizza for miles around..... Absolutely fantastic....."
"Just a short tram ride away from the city centre is Slattery, the home of desserts and all things chocolate!. The Whitefield shop is full of surprises – including the Strawberry and Marshmallow Kebabs served with two chocolate pots filled with white and milk liquid Belgian chocolate – perfect for ‘dunking’ in!. Or you could really test yourself and try their Chocolate Challenge."
"#amazing#lunch@Slattery_Cakes today, can't wait to go again #nomnom#chocolatelover#chocolatepic.twitter.com/Dc7rTmXVr0. — Catherine Bateman (@CatLouBateman) February 1, 2017. Just up the road is one of Whitefield’s best kept secrets."
"🍰 A wonderfully chocolatey Afternoon Tea, cakes, waffles, ice cream and their super-sweet Chocolate Challenge (which is far more difficult than it looks!)"
"Evelyn’s was the first restaurant Lisa and I checked out once we landed in Manchester. It is such a cute spot to enjoy a meal, a cocktail or a cup of coffee. It has a calm and comfortable atmosphere and we were surrounded by green plants everywhere, which we loved."
"If you’re looking for the fluffiest pancakes in town, Evelyn’s is your place. Their buttermilk pancakes with blueberries and honeycomb butter are infamous in Manchester’s Northern Quarter. If you haven’t tried them yet, what are you waiting for?"
"A healthy brunch option is a good idea for everyone every once in a while. But after tasting the food at Evelyn's, you may be back every week. They aim to serve food that is as healthy as possible."
"The concept of the railway arch as home to a coffee shop (The Fields Beneath or Doctor Espresso – Mama V's spring to mind), roastery (Neighbourhood Coffee), or, indeed, bakery (Hart’s Bakery), is well-established. For the last couple of years, their ranks have been swelled by Manchester’s ManCoCo, which is, as far as I know, the only combined coffee bar/roastery in a railway arch. Tucked away on Hewitt Street behind Manchester’s Deansgate, ManCoCo takes a little bit of finding, but once you find Hewitt Street itself, ManCoCo is pretty obvious, on the north side of the street."
"It is one of the famous cafés in Manchester, and the menu offers a wide range of coffee and accompanying snacks. The café isn’t merely restricted to serve the coffees, but it also provides a full menu of soups and slow-cooked meals. Based on the ground floor of the headquarter building, the café has earned the prestigious position of elite coffee shops in Manchester within no time."
"Located under one of the railway arches close to Deansgate train station is Mancoco. One of the original coffee roasters in Manchester they only purchase the finest sustainable, ethically-sourced speciality grade Arabica green coffee beans. All of their coffees are sourced from identifiable single-origin farms, estates or small farm cooperatives."
"Sushi Marvel Chorlton is a fully licensed Japanese deli that offers made to order food that are prepared freshly at their premises upon your request. Offering a wide variety of menu that will fit all people with different dietary requirements, they have gluten-free, vegetarian and vegan options to choose from. They have sashimi, nigiri, uramaki, futomaki, hosomaki, donburi, snacks and sides as well as specials."
"Coming in with rave reviews, Sushi Marvel was born in Chorlton before expanding to Manchester’s up and coming neighbourhood, Ancoats. The restaurant was created by a chef well-versed in sushi making, working in Hong Kong, Japan and London – so you know you’re in good hands when you visit."
"Sushi Marvel Chorlton foods are freshly prepared at its premises and made to order. They are a fully licensed Japanese Deli. Its menu is simple yet accommodating."
"Warrington’s parish church is an atmospheric sandstone building with a spire 86 metres high. This is the eighth highest spire in the country, and the fifth highest among parish churches. Most of St Elphin’s dates from a restoration that took place in the 1860s, but there are fragments of earlier buildings."