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A plate of street tacos with red wine on a wooden outdoor restaurant table.

A Taste of Birmingham food tour runs until July

Birmingham Food Tours: A Taste of Birmingham is running in Birmingham from 18 April to 25 July 2026, giving visitors and local diners a guided route through parts of the city’s food story.

The event is listed as a Guided Tour, with Birmingham named as the venue. The source does not publish a start time, end time, ticket price, booking wording or exact venue address in the supplied listing, so anyone planning to attend should check the latest event details before setting out.

Who it suits: people interested in Birmingham’s food scene, guided city experiences and tasting-led local culture.

A guided route through Birmingham’s food story

The tour is pitched around the city’s rich and changing food culture, a wider scene also reflected in events such as the Colmore Food Festival, rather than a single restaurant stop or market visit. The short source description points to a route stretching from a Desi pub to the oldest wine merchant in the city, suggesting a mix of historic food institutions and more recent influences that have shaped how Birmingham eats.

That gives the event a clear local angle. Birmingham’s food identity is often told through its neighbourhoods, migration history, independent venues and long-running traders. This tour appears designed for people who want that story told on foot, through places connected by flavour rather than through a standard sightseeing script.

For readers comparing options, this is best understood as a guided experience rather than a drop-in food festival. The event title, Birmingham Food Tours: A Taste of Birmingham, signals a curated route with commentary and stops, not a single venue programme.

Confirmed dates and venue details

Detail Information
Event Birmingham Food Tours: A Taste of Birmingham
Type Guided Tour
Location Birmingham, United Kingdom
Venue listed Birmingham
Dates 18 April to 25 July 2026
Time Not stated in the supplied listing
Price Not stated in the supplied listing
Booking details Not stated in the supplied listing

The available listing confirms the event window but does not give individual tour times. It also does not state whether every date between 18 April and 25 July is available, so the safest reading is that this is a tour series running within that period.

A related Demoduck listing for the Birmingham food tour dates also points readers to the same April-to-July window.

What the food stops suggest

Only two examples are named in the source text: a Desi pub and the oldest wine merchant in Birmingham. Even with limited detail, those references give the tour a broad span.

A Desi pub points towards one of the West Midlands’ most distinctive food traditions, where pub culture and South Asian cooking meet in a local format. The mention of the city’s oldest wine merchant adds a different layer: older commercial food and drink history, with a connection to Birmingham’s long-standing hospitality trade.

The source does not name the specific pub, wine merchant, number of stops, menu items or tastings included. It also does not state whether dietary requirements are accommodated. Readers should treat the published description as a flavour of the route rather than a full itinerary.

What to check before attending

Before making plans, confirm the practical details that are not visible in the supplied event listing: the exact meeting point, tour time, price, booking method and any food or drink inclusions.

The confirmed facts are that Birmingham Food Tours: A Taste of Birmingham is listed in Birmingham as a Guided Tour running from 18 April to 25 July 2026, with a route described as moving from a Desi pub to the oldest wine merchant in the city.

Source: Visit Birmingham Events

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Priya Marshall

Priya Marshall

Author

Priya Marshall covers Birmingham's events calendar through a public-interest lens, checking listings against venue notices, organiser updates and transport information before publication. She has reported on neighbourhood festivals, council-backed cultural programmes, road closures and accessibility issues across the West Midlands, with a focus on helping readers understand what is happening, what has changed and how local decisions affect community life

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